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.
- 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. [↩]


