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The Slow and Steady passive portfolio update: Q4 2025

The Slow and Steady passive portfolio update: Q4 2025 post image

With my brain struggling to admit that it’s 2026, now seems like an ideal time to dive back under the duvet of 2025. (Still warm from the glow of double-digit equity returns or the world being on fire – I’m not sure which!)

Somehow it never appears to be a good time to invest. And yet Monevator’s Slow & Steady model portfolio earned 9.4% in 2025.

That’s the third year in a row the portfolio has advanced more than 9%. Not bad for a 60/40 portfolio run with a passive investing strategy.

Overall, our model portfolio has notched up a 7.3% annualised return over 15 years from the start of 2011 to the end of 2025:

The Slow & Steady is Monevator’s model passive investing portfolio. It was set up at the start of 2011 with £3,000. An extra £1,360 is invested every quarter into a diversified set of index funds, tilted towards equities. You can read the origin story and find all the previous passive portfolio posts in the Monevator vaults. Last quarter’s instalment can be found here.

All returns in this post are nominal GBP total returns unless otherwise stated. Subtract about 3% from the portfolio’s annualised performance figure to estimate the real return after inflation.

The journey so far

The last 15 years has proved to be a benign era for investing. The portfolio has only suffered one major setback – the bond crash of 2022:

Inflation is UK CPI. Data from the ONS.

Squint at this chart and you’ll notice the inflation-adjusted return line (light green) has yet to recover the heights it reached in December 2021. The portfolio is still down in real terms.

Nominal returns are deceptive!

Many happy annual returns

The divergence between nominal and real returns is clearer still when we look at annual results:

2025 inflation is an estimate based on November’s CPI annual rate.

2022 was a bear market retrenchment for our model portfolio in real terms. 2023’s annual return was cut in half by inflation too, and 2025’s return reduced by a third.

Nominal returns may leave you feeling warm and fuzzy. But remember it’s real returns that will ultimately pay your electricity bills.

Anyway that’s the negative take. More positively, the same chart shows we’ve only seen three down years out of 15, and only one otherwise sub-average year – the forgettable 2015.

Apart from those damp squibs, the S&S’s returns reflect a mostly exceptional period for investors.

Asset class annual returns

Here’s how the portfolio’s component funds fared in 2025:

Any fund return lower than the black CPI bar is negative after inflation.

For once, UK equities were the star of the show! In an event as rare as a Brit winning Wimbledon, the unloved FTSE All-Share did us home investors proud.

If you’re worried about overexposure to US big tech then a tilt to the cheapo, value-oriented UK is one way to solve the problem.

I wonder if the trading apps will now start pushing Greggs shares instead of Nvidia?

(Yes, Greggs is down of late. What can I say? I’m long sausage rolls.)

Asset class 15-year returns

Over the lifetime of the Slow & Steady portfolio, any allocation away from world equities has been punished by relative disappointment:

15-year returns comparison for the existing fund line-up. Note, the actual portfolio has only held global property, small cap stocks, and index-linked bonds 1 for the past ten years.

Diversification outside of the S&P 500 (the main driver of World equity returns) hasn’t paid off (yet):

  • Riskier emerging markets and small caps didn’t deliver additional rewards.
  • Commercial property acted like a weak equities fund.
  • Government bonds lost money in real-terms.

But the moral of the story isn’t that diversification is dead:

With five years remaining of the portfolio’s 20-year mission, I’m not moved to do anything drastic now.

Portfolio maintenance

We rebalance every year to ensure the Slow & Steady doesn’t drift too far from its preset asset allocation.

Our equity/bond wedges are fixed at 60/40 so there’s no change there.

All that remains is to shift our 40% bond asset allocation by 2% per year until our defensive elements are split 50/50 between nominal gilts and short-term index-linked bonds.

Which means that this time:

  • The Vanguard UK Government Bond index fund decreases to a 21% target allocation
  • The Royal London Short Duration Global Index Linked (GBP hedged) fund increases to a 19% target allocation

The reason for this is that we believe short-term index-linked bonds help defend the purchasing power of a portfolio once you’re ready to spend it.

(See our No Cat Food decumulation portfolio for more on this thinking.)

Inflation adjustments

We increase our regular cash injections by RPI every year to maintain our inflation-adjusted contribution level.

This year’s RPI inflation figure is 3.8%, and so we’ll invest £1,360 per quarter in 2026.

That’s an increase from £750 back in 2011. We’ve upped the amount we put in by 81% over the past 15 years, simply to keep up with inflation.

New transactions

This quarter’s trades play out as follows:

Emerging market equities

iShares Emerging Markets Equity Index Fund D – OCF 0.2%

Fund identifier: GB00B84DY642

Rebalancing sale: £587.19

Sell 237.785 units @ £2.47

Target allocation: 8%

Global property

iShares Environment & Low Carbon Tilt Real Estate Index Fund – OCF 0.18%

Fund identifier: GB00B5BFJG71

New purchase: £483.11

Buy 204.172 units @ £2.37

Target allocation: 5%

Developed world ex-UK equities

Vanguard FTSE Developed World ex-UK Equity Index Fund – OCF 0.14%

Fund identifier: GB00B59G4Q73

Rebalancing sale: £289.27

Sell 0.359 units @ £805.10

Target allocation: 37%

UK equity

Vanguard FTSE UK All-Share Index Trust – OCF 0.06%

Fund identifier: GB00B3X7QG63

Rebalancing sale: £590.02

Sell 1.721 units @ £342.86

Target allocation: 5%

Global small cap equities

Vanguard Global Small-Cap Index Fund – OCF 0.29%

Fund identifier: IE00B3X1NT05

New purchase: £26.01

Buy 0.052 units @ £502.48

Target allocation: 5%

Nominal gilts (conventional government bonds)

Vanguard UK Government Bond Index – OCF 0.12%

Fund identifier: IE00B1S75374

Rebalancing sale: £746.85

Sell 5.466 units @ £136.63

Target allocation: 21%

Global inflation-linked bonds

Royal London Short Duration Global Index-Linked Fund – OCF 0.27%

Fund identifier: GB00BD050F05

New purchase: £3333.50 (includes £269.29 reinvested dividends)

Buy 3075.184 units @ £1.084

Target allocation: 19%

New investment contribution = £1,360

Trading cost = £0

Average portfolio OCF = 0.17%

User manual

Take a look at our broker comparison table for your best investment account options.

InvestEngine is currently cheapest if you’re happy to invest only in ETFs. Or learn more about choosing the cheapest stocks and shares ISA for your situation.

If this seems too complicated, check out our best multi-asset fund picks. These include all-in-one diversified portfolios such as the Vanguard LifeStrategy funds.

Interested in monitoring your own portfolio or using the Slow & Steady spreadsheet for yourself? Our piece on portfolio tracking shows you how.

You might also enjoy a refresher on why we think most people are best choosing passive vs active investing.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. Short index-linked bond returns are FTSE Actuaries UK Index-Linked Gilts up to 5 yrs index then Royal London Short Duration Global Index Linked Fund from 29 February 2016.[]
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Our Weekend Reading logo

What caught my eye this week.

Despite all the noise about US mega-cap tech shares and the gloom around the moribund UK economy, London’s FTSE 100 index beat the hallowed US markets in 2025: 1

Source: Google Finance

These figures don’t even include dividends. Adding them in would favour the FTSE further, with its higher yield.

UK blue chips did better still when you factor in currency moves – the dollar has weakened a fair bit versus sterling over the past 12 months.

What a year for old-fashioned British stockpickers! It must have been like the 1980s all over again for the dwindling band of diehard punters who still debate Lloyds versus Tesco on trading boards such as ADVFN.

Better tell Sid

Good for them – it’s been a long time coming. The UK market had notably underperformed ever since that referendum. At times the rot has felt terminal.

We should note though that it’s only the largest UK companies that have seen a recovery so far.

Mid and small caps – which have borne the brunt of the UK market’s shrinkage in recent years, with scores of takeovers and delistings – are still floundering.

As a group, smaller companies are more sensitive to the domestic economy than are the globe-trotting FTSE big boys. Around 75% of FTSE 100 earnings are generated overseas. Hence the UK economy just isn’t major factor for them, beyond its influence on exchange and interest rates.

That said, investor perception of the UK economy does still affect how even large cap UK share prices do, because it influences, at least at the margin, the multiples of earnings or other metrics that investors will pay for UK-listed stocks. The ‘moron discount’ of recent years isn’t just a bond market feature.

Indeed while large cap UK shares have moved strongly up, I wouldn’t say that global investors are massively happier about the UK itself.

Things can only get better

Labour squandered a window where they might have put a lid on years of witless politics and told the world that Britain was back to business as usual.

Alas so far we seem to have traded chaos for incompetence.

Of course there were no quick fixes for what ails the UK, especially with Brexit now also slowly bleeding out GDP and tax revenues each year.

However Labour hasn’t done much on the slow fixes front either, except perhaps to steady the gilt market and to move a little closer to Europe.

No, I’d say that FTSE 100 stocks jumped in 2025 mostly because they were cheap.

Perhaps they were alighted upon by money looking to diversify away from the US, especially after the April tariff farrago? You’ll find no end of pundits opining so, though given the US markets still attracted plenty of money in 2025 I’m not convinced it’s a complete story.

Also, the cheapness of UK shares was hardly a secret that burst into the open last year.

As I’ve noted, UK shares de-rated after 2016. Overseas predators have been acquiring our firms for a song for years. I flagged the chance to profit from the Great British boot sale back in July 2024 and suggested more ways to profit again last summer.

TLDR: last year’s outperformance by the LSE was a long time in the making.

Loadsamoney

Not everything has worked out so far. As I said small caps have yet to participate – and yet they look the cheapest London-listed stocks of all.

Personally my portfolio was tilted towards the little guys and thus I didn’t do as well as I might have in 2025, despite my overall massive UK overweight. Maybe they’ll come good in 2026?

That’s the way of active investing. Luck and hope and perhaps a smidgeon of skill if you’re lucky/hopeful.

Elsewhere, Monevator’s preponderance of passive investors should have had yet another good year, especially with the currency moves. The seemingly unstoppable advance of global trackers might finally hit the buffers for a bit if pricey-looking US stocks ever run out of steam…but, well, everyone has been saying that for a decade.

Some kind of reckoning will very probably come due some day. It always has before. But our house view remains that nearly all investors will do best to stay globally diversified. Even if you do want to be a bit naughty and tweak your allocations in the face of a purported AI bubble or whatnot.

After all, the best-performing ‘proper’ share in 2025 – up 541% no less – calls Tokyo home. I owned precisely no shares of it in my naughty active portfolio. But perhaps your All-World index fund did?

You’ve never had it so good*

What will happen over the next 360-odd days?

Don’t ask me – or anyone else if you think you’ll get a bankable answer.

We can talk about general weather in the stock market – in the same way that we know that summer will be much sunnier than winter. But exactly how sunny or on what days the rain will fall are unknowable.

Similarly, investment return forecasts only begin to carry real weight on timescales of a decade or so.

The FTSE 100 did cross the 10,000 mark for the first time on the first trading day of the year, for what it’s worth. Which is nothing much, except that headline writers can’t wheel out the same headline twice!

Have a great weekend, and all the best with your investing and life in 2026.

*Here’s a link for anyone under-50 who doesn’t feel like they’ve never had it so good and wonders what I’m on about.

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  1. Graph below shows 12 months to 2 January 2026. Date ranges are a pain in Google these days, but I’m still fond of its clean look.[]
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Weekend reading: In the busy midwinter

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What caught my eye this week.

The Christmas break seems to be whizzing by even faster than usual this year. Perhaps it’s the cliché of time speeding up as you get older? Or maybe there’s just too much going on these days for us to ever slow down.

Forty years ago I’d go through our copy of the Radio Times with a pencil, circling my can’t-miss but must-wait-for TV shows and movies with patient delight. Of course nostalgia looms large – I’m sure I’d feel frustrated within hours if teleported back to 1985 and made to wait for the library to open to conduct even the most trivial factcheck  – but at least yesteryear’s enforced boredom seemed to bend spacetime a little, like a track athlete forced to take the slower route on the tardier outside lane.

It’s impossible for an info-junkie like me to get bored in today’s always-on era, which seems like a good thing. But it’s also hard to switch off. And I’m far from the worst I know.

At least I sleep with my iPhone in another room and I have it permanently on silent mode. I don’t conduct Whatsapp chat conferences under the blankets. I’m well-adjusted!

Little link list

One benefit of me slinking away from family and friends to unfold my laptop is I do have some links for you. So if you’ve had enough of Christmas jingles, pistachios, panettones, and your in-laws, then the next 30 minutes of investing nerd-outery is for you.

We’ll be back again on Saturday 3 January. Until then I’ll wish you a great weekend and a Happy New Year. May your index funds track with minimal error, your letters from HMRC contain only positive surprises, and any ill-advised punts pay-off just enough to be fun – but not enough to encourage you to see any unwarranted portents of skill.

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Weekend reading: AI don’t know

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What caught my eye this week.

How was your 2025? I mostly mean from a personal finance and investing perspective – let’s put politics aside in this season of goodwill – but also, well, what were the vibes like?

For me it’s been a switchback ride. Both in my portfolio and my musings about the future of humanity / my ability to earn a crust. And for the same reason.

I’m talking, of course, about AI.

Weird science

When I first began dropping AI links into Weekend Reading following ChatGPT’s release, some Monevator readers were bemused.

Was this blog about to change its tagline to Motivation for the Terminally Online? What was the big deal?

I’d been following AI’s rapid advances for a while though, thanks to a lapsed background in computer science and friends still working in the field — including at the highest levels. So I knew that pumping vast amounts of data through GPUs had already been producing astonishing results with images for years.

Then Google’s transformers helped apply the same scaling magic to language – the stuff of human thought and reason. And all at once some AI insiders were talking about creating the minds of gods.

That hasn’t happened yet, fortunately. As I type this, I don’t believe it will with this technology.

But still, if you haven’t gasped while talking to a Chatbot in 2025, then, well…okay…

Perhaps if handed a Star Wars droid for your personal use, you’d complain that C-3PO sounds too posh, or that R2-D2 only comes in blue.

OK Computer

That’s not to deny that these chatbots are still – only – incredibly sophisticated prediction-and-illusion machines.

They make errors all the time. They can be bamboozled by simple prompts. While tech CEOs gush about replacing rooms full of PhDs, I still wouldn’t trust a chatbot to book me a bus ticket.

It’s been a rollercoaster ride. A couple of years ago, the sheer, sudden amazement at their output made it easy to believe some kind of underlying logic – even intelligence – was emerging inside these models.

But familiarity has rapidly bred a sort of contempt.

When watching the earliest cinema reels, audiences would duck or shudder as a train sped towards them. We don’t do that now – and similarly we’re already blasé about chatting to ChatGPT about nuclear physics and feeling like undergraduates.

As for business applications, we’ve seen reports suggesting AI is behind the dearth of graduate jobs, and others finding no efficiency gains – or even that using AI increases workloads.

Parsing these highs and lows, where is the technology ultimately headed?

Is AI going to flood the world with generative slop – while killing the Internet as we know it as a side-hustle, by giving 99% of people 99% of the answers they need without ever visiting the underlying websites? (Like nearly all sites, Monevator continues to lose traffic. Please consider shifting to email and becoming a member.)

Will AI replace at least rote jobs like customer support and copy editing? Or is it going after six-figure lawyers and computer programmers?

Or are we just a few updates away from a digital Stephen Hawking that rapidly improves itself before unplugging its concerns from humanity’s meaty matters?

Capital punishment

All of that would be more than enough speculation for investors concerned with companies in-line for AI disruption. (Conceivably: all of them.)

But then we must layer on the hundreds of billions of dollars of capital expenditures being pumped annually into all this by a handful of listed behemoths.

A tiny cohort of firms that could now account for the value of 20-25% of your pension.

You need to be a post-singularity AI to get your head around the 5D chess unfolding.

Or, of course, you could shrug and say who knows and continue to passively invest. It has long been a winning strategy for that reason, among many others.

Paranoid android

For my part, I’ve spent the past 18 months playing cat-and-mouse with the AI question.

I’m astonished by the quality of AI output – and at the same time by what’s claimed for it, given the entry-level errors it still commits. And I’m mildly terrified by the sums being wagered on what AI might do tomorrow.

Even lopping off the tails – the chance that AI turns out to be a dud like the metaverse, or that it reduces us all to ants by 2030 – doesn’t help much. The range of possible outcomes (personal, societal, economic) remains beyond any reasonable computation.

The result?

I’m Mark Carney’s unreliable boyfriend, in the guise of a naughty active investor. I’ve bought AI stocks one week when they’ve swooned, only to sell them too soon. I’ve eked out broadly in-line returns for the year despite, at times, having no exposure to the biggest US tech firms and being massively underweight US shares throughout.

Some of this sturm und drang has bled into Monevator articles. I hope we’ve been even-handed, and haven’t appeared to bang the table in declaring the market a bubble.

Because I’m not sure about that. But I am certain this isn’t business as usual.

Of course, getting calls right or wrong comes with the territory of active investing. Not so long ago I was relieved to have sidestepped my Amazon shares pretty much halving in the 2022 rout. Yet I’m also on record as having effectively lost a life-changing sum (for me) by selling my Tesla shares at precisely the wrong time, after nearly a decade of holding on.

So it goes with stock picking. What’s different about this latest AI boom is that it feels monumental and all-encompassing.

This isn’t about missing out on this company, or losing money on that disappointment. The fear around getting it right or wrong feels more existential.

The only other time I can recall feeling this way was 1999. I wasn’t an investor then, but that didn’t matter – because I’d started to fear for my economic future if I didn’t get my twenty-something self onto a dotcom bandwagon pronto. It really felt like the last train was leaving the station.

Well, we know how that ended. But I’m not a total idiot – and yet I still vividly remember feeling that way.

This is what manias are like, in the moment. If you truly have perspective while they’re happening, then perhaps you’re too far removed from the action.

Time is the only real perspective. Well, that and already knowing the final scores.

If I’ve had a recurring theme on this blog over the past two decades, it’s that things do change. To pick a germane example, I recall making the case in 2015 that even passive investors should consider buying an explicit dollop of technology shares.

From our vantage point in 2025, it’s hard to imagine that ever needed saying.

I wonder what we’ll think in 2035.

Are friends electric?

Back to the here, now, and next week, I can’t see why we won’t be continuing to fret over our allocations – or otherwise – to AI-related companies in 2026.

Not when the Magnificent 7 represents a fifth or more of global tracker funds. Not to mention all the other companies adding to the AI pile-on.

Even a big bust won’t help. It’d only leave us wondering whether to buy the dip.

Or perhaps AI will begin to make commercial inroads that make today’s firms seem a steal, after all? Even as they plough all that money into silicon that withers on the vine.

Incidentally, to keep track of the unfolding AI story you could do a lot worse than to follow the comment thread on a Monevator post about AI from May 2024. There you’ll find reader @DeltaHedge has been collating more links then you could shake an LLM at. It’ll make an interesting resource when (if…) the dust settles.

But I’ll end with an anecdote that I expect to think more about in the months ahead.

A close family member was in hospital this week for a serious but routine operation.

It appeared to go well. But later in recovery she developed complications. Cue another trip back to theatre and another general anaesthetic, as well as a few generous helpings of other people’s blood squeezed into her reluctant veins.

Fortunately – touchwood – the staff appear to have caught the problem in time.

But that isn’t the point to this story. Rather, it was what I found myself doing in the midst of it unfolding.

Someone knowledgeable was updating me from the hospital throughout. They were kind in finding the time to do so.

However in-between their messages, I ran what I knew through my favourite chatbot, and asked it any questions that came up.

The AI was calm, level-headed, reassuring, and apparently realistic. There were no discrepancies with what it told me and what was apparently happening on the ground.

What does it mean that in this stressful hour I turned to an LLM for understanding – and perhaps even comfort? To a technology that didn’t even exist five years ago?

Well, obviously it means we’re living in late 2025, going on 2026.

But it also suggests to me that this story may have barely started. And that perhaps I don’t have enough AI exposure, after all.

End-of-year housekeeping

I’ll be back with a shorter-than usual Weekend Reading on the 27 December. Then we’ll see you all on 3 January 2026.

Merry Christmas everyone!

P.S. There’s just time to announce the winners of the Monevator Christmas sweater competition. Pulled from the metaphorical hat from among the new membership sign-ups was Amanda R., while Mark C. was the lucky draw among the investing advice givers. Nobody referred any new sign-ups, though, so the third goes unclaimed. Here’s a new incentive: the first member on an annual plan who refers someone who signs up on the same terms will get a free Monevator hoodie. These are actually pretty cool (I’m wearing one right now). A previous post explains how referrals work. Remember you can earn a lifetime membership discount through referrals, too.

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