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Are you ready for interest rate cuts?

Are you ready for interest rate cuts? post image

“The world is changed. I feel it in the water. I feel it in the earth. I smell it in the air. Much that once was is lost, for none now live who remember it.”
– Galadriel, The Fellowship of the Ring

Remember the days when we’d forgotten inflation existed? When earning money on cash was just a hazy memory of building society passbooks and logging into first-generation Internet savings accounts?

Yes I know that world was just three years ago. No need for Peter Jackson’s FX wizardry to bring 2021 to life. I’ve still got a jar of curry paste at the back of my fridge from then that needs finishing.

And yet… some people are talking like the environment has changed forever.

Rates and yields are up and will stay that way. Cash is king, bonds are bullshit – and don’t talk to me about mortgage rates.

If that’s you, then buckle up!

US inflation is falling faster than expected – after nearly a year of false dawns – and the Federal Reserve will begin to cut rates soon. Almost certainly in September I reckon, especially after its latest minutes cited the Fed’s political independence. That preemptive reminder smacks to me of starting a rate hiking cycle on the cusp of the US elections.

Back home UK inflation is already on target at 2%. Yes, some price pressure remains – particularly in services – but I don’t believe that’ll stop the Bank of England cutting. Probably in August.

It’s got a green light now the Fed looks like it’s sharpening its axe. And the ECB has already done its first interest rate cut for five years.

Rate expectations

What will happen when the all-important US Federal Reserve starts cutting interest rates?

Well, this is investing and you know the score…

…it depends!

One or two cuts won’t change much. In theory they should be more or less priced-in.

The ructions we saw over the last couple of years as rates soared were because they went much higher – and more quickly – than investors expected, as inflation proved stickier than was anticipated:

Source: Bank of England

I warned rising interest rates would have ramifications in February 2022. Just a few months later I was urging you to stress test your mortgage payments.

Good stuff and I’d argue I was modestly ahead of most commentators out there. Many Monevator readers also shrugged at the idea of rates rising. Nothing to see here!

Which was fair enough really, because I certainly wasn’t screaming about the bond crash we actually saw in 2022.

Nor did I predict, obviously, the turbo-charging factor of somebody thinking it’d be a good idea to hand Liz Truss the levers of power for a few weeks that year.

In fact if you weren’t humbled by how inflation, rates, bonds, and equities moved between 2022 and 2024 then you either weren’t paying attention, or else you earn seven-figures at an investment bank, got it all wrong too, but you’re not paid for feeling humble.

What goes up can come down

Anyway here we are on the cusp of rate changes once more. Things shouldn’t be as dramatic as exiting the near-zero rate era, however.

Inflation looks mostly tamed, barring unforeseen ‘events’. Rates will be cut – and the Fed in particular usually keeps cutting for a while once it gets started.

But I don’t think we should expect US rates to fall much below 3% in the foreseeable future, from 5.5%.

UK rates may well not get much lower than 4%, from today’s 5.25%.

What do I know, though? In fact what does anyone know?

Well, the shape of the yield curve does give us a clue that rates aren’t expected to head much below 4%. In fact it suggests they’ll need to rise again in a few years:

Source: Bank of England

However long-term rates aren’t under a central bank’s control. Yes its short-term rate stance influences expectations. But a bunch of other macroeconomic variables are more influential.

Besides, as always anything can happen.

The graph above charts forward yields for the next 40 years. But five years is a long time in the markets these days. Five months sometimes.

So with all these offerings to the anti-hubris forces duly tossed onto the sacrificial altar of prevarication, let’s consider how a few rate cuts could shake things up.

Interest on cash savings

We could have a big debate about whether central banks set interest rates or whether they basically follow market rates, which in turn are largely driven by inflation and economic prospects.

I’m inclined to think a bit of both, especially since quantitative easing arrived. But there’s no denying that at the sharpest end for commercial banks, central bank policy rates are strongly influential.

Long story short: once the Bank of England starts cutting rates and likely beforehand – basically right now – the best rate you’ll get on easy-access cash will fall. (Bonuses, teasers, and gimmicks aside).

We’ll probably have a grace period where we can lock in higher rates on longer-term savings though. And as always when to fix will be a guessing game.

It’s probably futile to try too hard to outwit the money markets. Spend your energy instead hunting for the best rates that suit your time horizon whenever you actually have the cash to hand.

Whatever you do don’t leave cash languishing in low-rate current accounts for years! Even with inflation back to normal levels.

Mortgage rates and house prices

Sitting right alongside cash savings in another in-tray marked No Shit Sherlock are mortgage rates.

Yes, mortgage rates are determined by market swap rates, not the Bank of England’s Bank Rate.

And also yes, if the Bank of England is cutting interest rates then it will very likely to be doing so in an environment where yields – including swap rates – are softening across the waterfront.

But whatever the drivers, mortgage rates will probably fall as Bank Rate falls, at least a bit.

That lower mortgage rates are coming is suggested by the BOE’s forward curve for overnight swaps:

Source: Bank of England, yesterday.

Five-year fixed-rate mortgages have already sported lower rates than two-year fixes for some time. (Usually you’d expect longer fixes to be pricier, due to inflation and interest rate risk, and various market forces.)

How far could mortgage rates fall when the rate cutting begins? That remains to be seen.

Much of it will already be priced in, as per the yield curve above.

I’d love the chance to fix my mortgage for five years at 2% again. But I don’t fancy my chances.

Back to buy-to-let?

When mortgage rates spiked in 2022, it revealed just how stretched house prices had become. Particularly in London, the South East, and certain other hotspots around the country.

Together with tax changes finally reaching their apogee, higher rates also ruined the economics for sensible buy-to-let landlords.

But if mortgage rates fall a lot, then the opposite could be true.

Housing will become more attractive again, and prices will rise. Landlords will resume their bidding against first-time buyers.

I’m not saying it’s right or desirable for house prices to rise like this. And I suppose if Labour really does encourage 1.5 million new homes to be built then this could dampen things.

At the same time though, building on this scale will require loads more well-paid bricklayers, electricians, plumbers, and so on. And they’ll all want somewhere to live…

Bonds

Central bank interest rate decisions do not control bond yields. They are only directly influential at the very short end, where overnight cash and cash-like securities compete with the lowest duration bonds.

However even this limited effect does influence yields along the curve, to some extent.

More importantly, interest rate moves are usually reflective of how market rates are moving anyway.

I mean we all saw how the interest rate hikes of 2022 to 2023 coincided with the smashing of the bond market.

But if you weren’t paying attention, here’s a reminder, with reference to iShares’ core UK gilt ETF (ticker: IGLT):

Source: Google Finance

Quite the speedy crash to suffer in anything you hold a lot of – let alone what most people considered to be the safety-first bulwark of their portfolio.

We’ve written a lot about why this happened and what it means. (And also whether we should invest differently with these lessons learned going forward).

And my co-blogger The Accumulator has also written extensively about how and why bonds of particular ‘duration’ respond to changes in yields.

Check out our bond archives for a refresher.

The point I’m here to make today though is that the same maths that drove bond prices down when yields rose as inflation ran rampant will do the opposite if yields go into reverse.

Bond duration maths doesn’t just tell us how much bonds will fall with lower yields. It also tells us how they will rise.

Again, I’m not going to repeat all our previous articles here. Suffice it to say that with an effective duration of around 8, the iShares ETF above could see a return (with income) of over 20% if its (constituents’) yield was to fall by a couple of percent due to prolonged interest rate cutting.

Now as it happens, I do not expect yields to fall by 2% across the board for gilts.

And the crash in the graph above reflects a historic move from near-zero to 4-5%. The reverse isn’t likely to be repeated.

But some kind of notable capital gain is likely if and when rates move down and stay down, presuming inflation remains subdued. That’s the main point to takeaway.

Do you feel lucky, punk?

Indeed there are opportunities to get quite cute with bonds if you’re that way inclined.

A friend of mine has put a big wodge of his portfolio into one of the longest-dated UK gilts – an issue not due to mature until the 2060s. From memory the duration is around 20 or more.

And in doing so he also secured a yield-to-maturity of over 4%.

As my friend sees it, he’s locked in that 4% for the rest of his investing life assuming he holds until maturity. But he also effectively gets an ‘option’ on an economic depression until then.

His very long duration gilt would soar if rates were ever slashed back towards zero. And that could offset a lot of pain in his portfolio elsewhere in such circumstances.

On the other hand his holding will go down 20% if yields rise by just 1%. Not for widows and orphans!

For most Monevator readers the point is that it’s probably a bad time to throw gilts overboard.

Yes it would have been great not to own them in 2022 and 2023, with hindsight.

But that was then, this is now. Going forward government bonds offer a small but reasonable yield, as well as the potential to cushion your equity portfolio in a conventional tits-up stock market crash.

That’s not to be lightly discarded, unless perhaps you’re in your 20s or early 30s with many decades of saving and investing still ahead of you.

Equities

The $100 trillion question! How will equities perform when rates are cut?

In theory lower rates should be good for most companies.

This is partly for practical business reasons – debt becomes less costly to service, and growth capital is easier to source – but also theoretical.

Rate cuts could lead to analysts using a lower discount rate in their valuation sums. This mathematically boosts the potential value of future earnings, and hence the perceived ‘fair value’ of share prices.

Even firms that have benefited directly from the higher rate environment – High Street banks, say – could benefit if easier money staves off the threat of rising delinquencies in their loan books.

Remembering the fallen

Some companies will do better than others, of course. And to the practical and theoretical drivers behind any such divergence we can also add market sentiment and animal spirits.

In theory, investors should have been ‘looking through’ the past couple of years of higher rates when they valued biotech growth stocks, say, or the holdings of specialist investment trusts.

Most of these assets are expected to be around for decades, if not indefinitely, after all.

High rates will cause the odd car crash, sure. What really matters for most investments when it comes to rates though is their level (and that of inflation) over the business cycle – or even the life of the company.

But in practice, traders gonna trade.

For instance, infrastructure and renewable energy trusts went from sky-high premiums of 20% or more just a couple of years ago – before rates rose – to discounts of about the same level at their recent lows.

That’s a 40% move in valuation versus net assets – effectively driven by vibes, not fundamentals.

Who says this won’t be at least partially reversed if rates fall a lot?

Yields on such trusts could start to look comparatively tempting again. Wealth managers with one eye on career risk might finally decide it’s safe to put them in clients’ portfolios once more.

Similar arguments can be made for small cap stocks and disruptive technology (outside of AI).

In fact most shares that had the misfortune during the last couple of years to not be US large caps touting a compelling AI story could have some legs in them.

Back out recent gains from the so-called Magnificent Seven and a few other AI-related plays – and perhaps the weight loss drug giants of Europe – and US and global returns would be much more muted.

However if input costs are now no longer going up and rates are coming down, then many companies around the world could look better value on paper than those tech giants. Barring an everything-changes AI singularity, anyway.

The subsequent market rotation away from mega-cap growth could fuel a broader rally for such stocks.

I just read that nVidia fell 5% with the US inflation surprise yesterday. At the same time US small caps spiked 3% higher. Early moves aren’t always right, but it’s pretty suggestive.

Or something weird could happen and the global stock market could crash 30%.

Because that could always happen. Never forget it.

Annuities

I’m no expert on annuities. However all things being equal I’d expect a lower interest rate environment to reduce the annual income you’re offered in exchange for your pension pot.

Annuity amounts have soared since the lows of December 2021. We’re talking payout rates 30% to 80% or more higher now than back then, depending on your age and what annuity you went for.

That is a gigantic move for a payment that is fixed for life. A 60-year old might have been promised a little over £4,000 every year for a level rate annuity in late 2021.

Today they’d get over £6,000 annually for life for the same £100,000.

As stated, I doubt we’ll see interest rates near-0% again (though never say never). But yields across the market will likely come down to some extent. And it usually pays not to be too greedy.

Irreversibly swapping capital for an annuity is a terrifying prospect for me. But it may be the simplest and best thing to do to secure an income in many circumstances, at least with some portion of one’s capital.

Stay alert, and seek advice if you need it for sure.

To conclude at the beginning

To repeat myself, nobody knows with certainty the forward path of interest rates.

It’s true people are paid millions to put other people’s billions behind their views of where rates will go.

And various yield curves give us a clue as to how these bets are shaping up, too.

But none of this future is nailed-on, and such predictions are frequently confounded. Again, compare market expectations for rates in late 2021 with where we were by mid-2023 for a textbook example.

If rates fall a lot, then it would be very good for bonds and potentially for equities.

As I say, many people have a ‘cash is king‘ attitude at the moment. It usually takes a few years of big gains from markets and titchy returns from cash accounts to change that.

On the other hand, starting valuations for equities are far from on the floor. The US already looks positively peaky. We’d need to see earnings really take off for US markets to keep pulling ahead.

A lot will depend on why rates are cut – if they do fall very low – as much as the absolute level they reach. And again, how much the pace of rate cuts and the level they settle at comes as a surprise to markets.

If rates go down because inflation is quiescent despite a strong global economy then we’re golden.

But if rates are ultimately slashed in the face of a big slowdown and rising unemployment, then that would be much better for bonds than for most equities.

As ever, a typical person will do best to diversify their portfolios passively and try not to be too cunning.

But as always, others of us will ask where’s the fun in that?

Either way we’ll be here on Monevator throughout the cycle – trying not to humblebrag too much when our warnings prove prescient whilst guiltily disclaiming our human failings.

TLDR: maybe it’s a good time to lock-in a high rate on your cash on deposit, but also to be a bit more optimistic if you’re remortgaging.

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The Slow and Steady passive portfolio update: Q2 2024

It’s been a slow and steady quarter for the Slow & Steady portfolio. Our model passive investing loadout has risen just 1% over the last three months.

Still, we’ve now had three quarters of growth on the trot – and that has certainly put the colour back into our assets.

Here are the numbers, in Right-o-vision™:

The Slow & Steady portfolio is Monevator’s model passive investing portfolio. It was set up at the start of 2011 with £3,000. An extra £1,264 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 gainers:

  • Emerging markets: 5.4%
  • UK equity: 3.7%
  • Developed World, ex-UK: 2.5%. (The US led the charge, Europe barely stirred, and Japan was a dead weight)

Downers? Global small cap and global property both lost almost 3% each, while UK gilts slipped back 1%.

At least government bonds are up 4% on a one-year view. Their performance has been a horror show across the portfolio’s 13 years of existence though, thanks mostly to their 2022 rout.

America the beautiful

The recovery in the S&S over the past year has been decidedly lop-sided. It’s been driven mostly by our Developed World fund, where performance has leant heavily on a chunky US engine.

The US component is up around 27%. The UK, Europe, Japan, and Emerging markets have only returned about 13%.

Quite a gap – and enough to make you wish you had the gift of clairvoyance.

Don’t look back

Blame summer whimsy, but I’ve done something you should never do. I’ve gone back to the portfolio’s original members1 to check on their performance.

It’s a form of mental torture. Like any act of hindsight it invites you to imagine a parallel reality where you were an all-knowing genius who could divine the best course in advance.

Below are our starter funds’ cumulative nominal returns from January 2011 until now – absent all our rebalancing, drip-fed contributions, and the asset allocation changes we made along the way:

ETF data and charts from JustETF. Returns include dividends but not inflation.

Yee haw! Don’t mind me, I’m lying in the gutter staring at the stars (and stripes). La! La! La! America!

Bigger and better

Just how exceptional has America been? I find it easier to gauge performance using annualised returns:

  • US: 14.9%
  • Europe: 7.4%
  • Japan: 6.8%
  • UK 6.2%
  • Pacific ex Japan 5.3%
  • Emerging markets 3%
  • Gilts 1.5%

Remember: the average historical return for equities is 8% while government bonds have weighed in at 4%. (Those are nominal returns, before fund fees).

By this light every asset has been sub-par over the life of the Slow & Steady except the US. It alone has dragged the overall portfolio return up to a respectable level. Gilts and emerging markets have actually lost money, assuming average inflation of 3%.

Just think about how China has grown since 2011 – yet emerging markets have been terrible. Buying into the obvious growth story does not necessarily translate into shareholder profits.

Something to keep in mind if you’re tempted by an AI-focussed ETF today.

Crystal balls

Now let’s really twist the knife and revisit every asset class I might have plausibly chosen back in 2011:

I did consider a tech holding at the time. But it felt like the sector was already covered by the US – and later the World tracker. All true, and yet the 100% tech fund still delivered a thumping annualised return of 20%, compared to ‘just’ 14.8% for the US and 11.6% for the MSCI World.

Tech was another obvious growth story back in 2011. Everyone was hot for Facebook. But there were also lots of warnings that the sector was overvalued and outsized returns could prove hard to realise.

As things played out the warnings proved prescient for China, but not for tech.

Oh well. To be honest I wouldn’t have allocated more than an additional 5% to tech anyway, given its presence in the core US fund.

Key tech-away

Beyond the top three funds – all driven by Big Tech – everything else in the historical Could, Shoulda, Woulda rearview mirror was an also-ran.

Cash is the worst performer with an annualised return of 0.81%. That makes it a massive loser after 3% inflation.

Funnily enough, the 2.65% brought home by index-linked gilts means they’re doing a reasonable job of tracking long-term inflation – after negative yields and fund fees have taken a bite.

Linkers also tracked well ahead of gilts over this period.

Commodity returns were awful. Just 1.82% vs a nominal historical average of 7.5%.

Gold’s 5.4% annualised initially feels like nothing special but is actually spectacular in comparison to the other defensive asset classes on the menu.

Remember though, the point of defensive asset classes is less their long-term returns – though we still want those to be positive – and more what they do when equities sputter.

On the growth side, commercial property (5.6%) and the high-yielding Global Select Dividends were pretty ‘meh’ compared to a vanilla global tracker.

What does this prove?

If you went all-in on the Nasdaq over a decade ago and ditched this diversification nonsense then congratulations.

Did you just get lucky? On the equity side, there were good reasons in 2011 not to overweight the US – or even the tech sector. They were punts I certainly wasn’t qualified to make.

Lars Kroijer summed up the dilemma in his excellent post Why a total world equity index tracker is the only index fund you need, writing:

If you are overweight or underweight one country compared to its fraction of the world equity markets, then you are effectively saying that a dollar invested in the underweight country is less clever/informed than a dollar invested in the country that you allocate more to.

You would therefore be claiming to see an advantage from allocating differently from how the multi-trillion dollar international financial markets have allocated.

But you are not in a position to do that unless you have edge.

And we agreed we don’t have edge…

Everything I’ve learned about investing in the intervening years only confirms the wisdom of Lars’ words.

It’s fun to look back for hindsight wisdom sometimes.

But it’s more sensible to look forward with humility.

New transactions

Every quarter we throw £1,264 of fresh meat at the market wolves and hope they roll over and let us tickle their tums. Our stake/steak is split between our portfolio’s seven funds, according to our predetermined asset allocation.

We rebalance using Larry Swedroe’s 5/25 rule. That hasn’t been activated this quarter, so the trades play out as follows:

UK equity

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

Fund identifier: GB00B3X7QG63

New purchase: £63.20

Buy 0.232 units @ £272.59

Target allocation: 5%

Developed world ex-UK equities

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

Fund identifier: GB00B59G4Q73

New purchase: £467.68

Buy 0.705 units @ £663.53

Target allocation: 37%

Global small cap equities

Vanguard Global Small-Cap Index Fund – OCF 0.29%

Fund identifier: IE00B3X1NT05

New purchase: £63.20

Buy 0.152 units @ £416.84

Target allocation: 5%

Emerging market equities

iShares Emerging Markets Equity Index Fund D – OCF 0.19%

Fund identifier: GB00B84DY642

New purchase: £101.12

Buy 50.883 units @ £1.98

Target allocation: 8%

Global property

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

Fund identifier: GB00B5BFJG71

New purchase: £63.20

Buy 28.757 units @ £2.20

Target allocation: 5%

UK gilts

Vanguard UK Government Bond Index – OCF 0.12%

Fund identifier: IE00B1S75374

New purchase: £316

Buy 2.384 units @ £132.55

Target allocation: 25%

Global inflation-linked bonds

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

Fund identifier: GB00BD050F05

New purchase: £189.60

Buy 179.546 units @ £1.056

Dividends reinvested: £64.15 (Buy another 60.75 units)

Target allocation: 15%

New investment contribution = £1,264

Trading cost = £0

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 circumstances.

Average portfolio OCF = 0.16%

If this all 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 tracking your own portfolio or using the Slow & Steady investment tracking spreadsheet? Our piece on portfolio tracking shows you how.

Learn more about why we think most people are best choosing passive vs active investing.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

  1. I’ve looked at the same sub-asset classes though not the same funds we used. That’s because it’s much easier to chart on justETF than Morningstar. As a sanity check I’ve also sampled the original funds. The results are much the same. []
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Weekend reading: The hangover

Our Weekend Reading logo

What caught my eye this week.

The Tories are out after the worst run in British politics since King John.

Labour has won a landslide in terms of seats, but the magnitude has more in common with hacking credit card points than an overwhelming mandate from the people.

Taxes are at their highest level for 70 years. Brexit has taken 4-5% off annual GDP in perpetuity1. That’s left roughly a £40bn shortfall in annual state revenues that could be fixing the NHS or raising income tax thresholds, depending on how you roll. Instead the new government has little room to move.

The Tories have left us poorer economically and culturally, with our birthright to live and work in Europe traded away after a botched attempt to appease a fringe – ultimately gifting seats in Parliament to a populist you wouldn’t trust to run a Banana Republic. Strategic geniuses, these Eton lads.

This time things really can only get better. Except unlike in the 1990s, it’s now more akin to when you come around from a heart attack and a machine is faintly beeping in the background.

Grow for it

I’m not expecting miracles. I’m barely expecting anything. Just not shooting ourselves in the foot for a few years would be nice.

The best hope for Labour – and more importantly the country – is that stability and sanity at the top, plus some judicious low-cost tweaks to planning and policy – might unlock capital spending and investment.

Many indicators are already turning favourable – notably interest rates and inflation – and Sunak and Hunt’s relatively sensible fag-end innings deserves some credit for that. But there’s a mountain to climb.

With most tax rises ruled out, it’s possible the new chancellor will squeeze a bit more from the wealthy.

And honestly, when you compare the huge asset boom of the low-rate decades with real wages that have gone nowhere since 2008, is that really so unreasonable?

Business as usual

Of course that doesn’t mean anyone wants to pay more taxes personally. There’s always someone richer or less deserving to foot the bill.

So while I wish Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves the very best, Monevator will continue to highlight how taxes reduce your returns, the best ways to use your pension, and we’ll urge you to fill your ISAs.

Some may see something contradictory or hypocritical here. But it’s not our job to help the government plug the financial holes left gaping by the Brexit-y right-wing Tories. You don’t come to us to learn how to leave a tip for HMRC, any more than you’d read the Shooting Times for hints on veganism.

Of course we all hope the tax take rises because the economy gets going and lifts all boats. And after ten years in fairyland railing against EU bureaucrats, cold young men on boats, and people who live in Islington, maybe MPs can focus again on Britain’s real problems, starting with growth and productivity.

It won’t be easy to concentrate though, given the circus that will be unfolding on the right.

My hope is that the Conservatives will move back towards the centre. Genuinely! Despite what some readers think, I’m no left-wing tribalist and I voted for David Cameron back in 2010.

My despair at the Tories was all about what they became at their worst, not what they can represent at their best.

Where was the gracious Rishi Sunak – who gave two excellent speeches after losing – during the actual campaign? Hiding from Barry Blimp and his own party members I imagine. Fixing the right looks like an even harder task than Starmer faced in purging the Corbynistas from the left.

As for Labour and the new government, I want a mostly technocratic first-term that leaves us arguing the toss about tweaks to the ISA regime or child benefit.

More boring, please!

Have a great weekend.

[continue reading…]

  1. Per the OBR and Goldman Sachs. []
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Best global tracker funds – how to choose

A global tracker fund simulates the total world investment market.

A global tracker fund takes care of all your equity diversification needs in a single investment product. In this post, we’ll explain how to choose the best global tracker fund for you and we’ll list our picks from the choices on offer. 

What is a tracker fund?

A tracker fund is an investment fund that tracks an index like the S&P 500 for the US or, in the case of a global tracker, an index such as the FTSE All World. 

Your money is pooled alongside the global tracker’s many other participants. Together this capital is invested by the fund’s management team into every major stock market on the planet. 

As an investor in an index fund, you effectively get a slice of ownership in thousands of world-class firms. As a result you buy into the prospects of entire industries, countries, and continents at a stroke. 

The index followed by a global tracker fund is essentially an international league table of the world’s leading companies, from Apple to Nvidia to Taiwanese semiconductor giant TSMC. 

Global tracker funds trade stocks to replicate their chosen index as faithfully as possible. The index meanwhile is driven by the fortunes of its constituent firms. Over the long-term, company valuations rise and fall consonant with their performance, investor sentiment, and global capital’s best estimate of their future earnings. 

Investing this way is known as index investing or passive investing. It is the best strategy to choose in order to maximise your chances of meeting your financial goals. 

Investing giants like Warren Buffet recommend index funds. Even ex-hedge fund managers have switched sides and urge everyday investors to pick global index trackers. 

Global tracker funds – what really matters?

All-World – Most products labelled world index funds only encompass developed world countries. They skip the emerging markets, including the likes of China and India.

Such ‘world index trackers’ are less representative of the global economy. Instead look for ‘All-World’ or ‘Global’ index funds that include emerging markets.

Alternatively, if you do choose a developed world solution, you can add an emerging market index fund to your portfolio to make up the difference.

Diversification – Following on from the above, compare how many stocks your shortlist of global tracker funds includes. The more the better, because your index fund will then do a better job of representing the global stock markets that it follows.

Cost – This is the most important factor that will impact your returns and that you can control. There’s often little performance differential between global index trackers. If in doubt, pick the cheapest by Ongoing Charge Figure (OCF)Total Expense Ratio (TER)

Reassuringly expensive price tags will not secure you a superior global equity tracker fund. Go for cheap, plain vanilla flavour trackers. Don’t worry about bells and whistles. 

Don’t fret about small changes in cost, either. An OCF differential of 0.1% on £10,000 is just £10. That would cost you £50 a year on a £50,000 investment if, for example, your fund’s OCF is 0.25% instead of 0.15%.

Only you know your personal hassle threshold. Try to work out whether the impact of costs over your investing lifetime is worth switching.

Investor compensation – You’re covered for up to £85,000 if your global index fund is based in the UK. ETFs are not included. Note, investor compensation schemes only kick in if your broker or fund manager goes bust and your money disappears. Stock market losses are not covered!

The index – You should Google the tracker’s index to make sure it’s truly global. If it isn’t, find out what’s missing. Check your product’s factsheet, too.

Global index fund or global ETF?

ETFs and index funds are both types of index tracker. They’re both excellent ways of quickly diversifying your investments across the globe for an amazingly low cost. 

We’re equally happy using ETFs or index funds and include both in our best global tracker fund table below. 

The only time the fund type is a deal breaker is if:

  • You want your tracker to be covered by the FSCS compensation scheme. If so, then check this list of UK-domiciled index funds including global options
  • Your stockbroker charges an ETF dealing fee that costs more than 1% of your typical transaction value.
  • The same broker allows you to trade index funds for free. 

In the latter case, we’d invest in a global index fund in preference to the global ETF. That’s because the impact of a high dealing fee is surprisingly damaging over the long-term. 

See our cheap broker comparison table for more. Percentage fee brokers often allow you to trade global index funds for nothing. 

A few brokers also enable you to trade global equity ETFs for £0. Check out InvestEngine, Freetrade, and Vanguard for that option. 

Best global tracker funds – compared 

Tracker Cost = OCF (%) Index Emerging Markets (%) No of holdings Domicile
HSBC FTSE All-World Index Fund C 0.12 FTSE All-World 8.5 3,571 UK
SPDR MSCI ACWI IMI ETF 0.17 MSCI ACWI IMI 7.5 3,504 Ireland
iShares MSCI ACWI ETF 0.2 MSCI All Country World (ACWI) 7 1,703 Ireland
Vanguard FTSE All-World ETF 0.22 FTSE All-World 8 3,643 Ireland
Vanguard FTSE Global All Cap Index Fund 0.23 FTSE Global All Cap Index 8 7097 UK

Source: Morningstar and fund provider’s data.

There is very little to choose between these five global equity trackers:

  • HSBC’s global index fund is the cheapest and so tops the table.
  • The SPDR and iShares ETF follow MSCI indexes whereas the others follow a FTSE index. The indexes vary somewhat in country composition but have performed almost identically over the last decade.
  • Vanguard’s Global All Cap index fund and SPDR’S MSCI ACWI IMI have about 5% small cap exposure and thus greater diversification than the rest.  

The reality is these shades of grey haven’t made much difference to results over the longer term. More on that in a moment.

There are two relatively new entrants into the global tracker fund market to keep an eye on. They’re low cost but haven’t had time to build a track record yet:

  • Amundi Prime All Country World ETF – OCF 0.07% (The cheapest global tracker fund available.)
  • Invesco FTSE All World ETF – OCF 0.15%

I’ll also throw two other choices into the pot because they do something a little different:

Vanguard’s LifeStrategy funds include a UK equity bias of around 20%. That compares to a 4% UK allocation for the true global index trackers in the table. You could choose LifeStrategy 100 if home bias suits your situation. Go for LifeStrategy 20-80 if you want an all-in-one fund that includes government bonds. 

The Fidelity fund is actively managed. It features a REIT exposure and small cap allocation of about 10%. 

Both are funds-of-funds. They manage their asset allocation by holding other index trackers instead of trading the shares of listed firms. 

Here’s a useful piece on how to compare index trackers.

Best global tracker funds – results check 

Source: Trustnet’s Multi-plot Charting tool

I’m most interested in the ten-year annualised (nominal) returns for the global tracker selection above because that’s the longest comparison period we have for most of the funds in the mix.

I’ve paired the leading index trackers with their underlying index using the coloured boxes because a well-functioning passive fund should perform in line with its benchmark.

(In fact, most trackers should lag their index because the fund pays fees whereas the index doesn’t bear that cost. Intriguingly, the SPDR ETF leads its index – suggesting management have got a trick or two up their sleeve.)

You can see that there’s nothing between the two leading global tracker funds that sport 10-year returns.

HSBC’s FTSE All World index fund is the best performing fund over five years, though its lead versus the iShares ETF has been narrowed.

The margin looks too slim to take seriously.

That said, the HSBC tracker has maintained a consistent lead over its Vanguard FTSE All-World rival.

However, the Vanguard ETF was a 0.1% nose ahead of the HSBC product a few years ago.

It could be that HSBC’s significant fee advantage is starting to tell. Or that some other minor variation in their respective holdings means advantage HSBC.

But it’s best not to put too much weight on short-term return results which can easily be reversed by market moves.

Stress-free investing

If you’re starting from scratch then by all means choose the HSBC FTSE All World Index fund.

But there’s no need to switch out of the other top five funds because of this result.

Index trackers are typically cookie-cutter products. The results demonstrate the top five all work just fine. They are practically interchangeable.

The fact is we’re not checking performance to crown the one, true, best global tracker fund.

With me-too products, you don’t have to over-optimise. Any candidate from a field of well-matched rivals will probably be good enough.

Our performance check just ensures that nothing on our shortlist is broken, or isn’t what we think it is.

A world of difference

All the same, the performance check does enable us to see that the Fidelity fund and Vanguard’s LifeStrategy do trail the pack significantly over ten years.

If their tilts towards UK shares or global REITs go on a hot streak then one of the bottom two could easily shoot up the table. But if you want a pure global market cap strategy then stick with the top five.

Here’s a few other things to note.

Fund sizes – All five index trackers in our top table have hundreds of millions in assets under management (AUM). Efficiencies of scale typically kick in above £100 million. The iShares ETF is more than eight times the size of the SPDR ETF, but their performance is neck-and-neck over ten years.

Fixed income – The trackers in our table are equity funds. Owning additional high-quality government bonds is crucial to help you not to freak out during a stock market crash.

Check out our best bond fund choices to find your fixed income Venus for your equity Mars.

Understanding how to build your asset allocation will help you work out how much you need to put in safer assets.

Income versus accumulation – All of our best global index tracker picks come in both flavours, except the iShares and SPDR ETFs which are only available as an accumulating fund.

World and World ex-UK – I excluded these trackers, because it makes no sense to only include the Developed World or skip the UK when you’re trying to diversify across the whole world.

KISS

The beauty of the single global equity tracker strategy is its simplicity.

Yes, you could shave away a little cost by building a similar portfolio from separate regional trackers.

But is it worth the aggro in time and dealing fees? And can you trust yourself to stick to the global market’s verdict? Or will you justify trimming back on Japan or the US or wherever because you can apparently spot a bubble that everyone else has missed?

Fill your boots if you psychologically need the control – but know that you don’t have to.

Nobody can predict which strategy will win over your investment lifetime. But putting a global tracker fund at the core of your asset allocation is a rational choice in an insane world.

Take it steady,

The Accumulator

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