Has the FTSE 100 really performed as badly this century as it appears? (2024)

Apple has become the first company worth US$2 trillion (£1.7 trillion), meaning that it is now more valuable than all the companies in the FTSE 100 (they add up to £1.5 trillion). This is extraordinary news about one American tech company, but it also points to the fact that FTSE 100 share prices have performed poorly against rival indices around the world for several decades. As we shall see, however, it’s a more complicated story than it first appears.

If an investor had bought £1,000 of the shares of all the companies on the FTSE 100 on January 31 2001 and sold them on July 31 of this year, she would have lost £63.48, a price return of -6.3%, even before you take inflation into account.

This was at least a better performance than one major index, the Euro Stoxx 50. The constituents of this index are blue-chip companies from nine eurozone countries (Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Spain). Investing in this index in the same period would have reduced your pot by 33.6% (that’s £664 for your £1,000 investment after 20 years).

But both the FTSE 100 and Euro Stoxx 50 compare poorly against other international indices, as can be seen in the graph below (click on it to make it bigger). Over the same period, Japan’s Nikkei 300 went up 17.9%, Germany’s DAX achieved 81.2%, and the American Dow Jones Industrial Average achieved 142.7%.

Stock indices compared

Making sense of the numbers

To some extent, the FTSE’s poor performance can be explained by external forces. If we only look at the period from January 31 2001 to May 31 2016, the month before the European referendum, the FTSE 100 was only down 1.1% (instead of our 20-year -6.3%). This was relatively better compared to the Euro Stoxx 50, which achieved -35.9% over that period. And although the pre-referendum FTSE 100 was still much worse than the Nikkei, DAX and Dow Jones, it is less so than before: their respective rises over the same period are 5.2%, 51% and 63.3%.

Even then, there have been several mitigating factors for the FTSE 100 since the Brexit vote. It reached an all-time peak in May 2018, buoyed by a weaker pound and a truce in the trade war between the US and China.

It has also performed particularly poorly since the COVID-19 outbreak. From January 2001 to January 2020, the FTSE 100 was actually up 15.7%. The Euro Stoxx 50 was down 23.8% over the same period, while the Nikkei, DAX and Dow Jones achieved 30.6%, 91.1% and 159.5% respectively.

This means that Brexit and COVID-19 might explain some of the poor performance of FTSE 100 companies in the last two decades. But what other factors are in play?

The companies in the FTSE 100, especially the biggest ones, tend to belong to traditional industries such as pharmaceuticals (AstraZeneca and GlaxoSmithKline), banking (HSBC), mining (BHP), and oil and gas (Royal Dutch Shell and BP). The exposure of the index to the banking industry has perhaps been particularly detrimental to the performance of the FTSE 100.

The graph below plots the performance of the whole index against the performance of its banking and computing stocks. As you can see, banking stocks have performed particularly badly in the last two decades. For example Barclays’s stocks have lost around 48% of their value since 2001. One of the reasons for such a poor performance, in addition to the financial crisis, is likely to be that low interest rates have squeezed banks’ profit margins.

Total FTSE 100 vs banking and computing stocks

Another potential reason for the underperformance of the FTSE 100 is that there are very few IT companies. Tech stocks like Apple and Microsoft have a very large weighting in the US, but their UK-listed equivalents represent a very small weight in the FTSE 100.

The reason why the share prices of IT companies tend to perform better is that they are usually younger and thus have stronger growth opportunities. True to form, the IT companies on the FTSE 100 have performed relatively well in the past decade, even if they have been quite volatile in the last couple of years, probably because of the uncertainty related to the threat of a no-deal Brexit.

For example, Avast is a Czech company that has been listed in London since May 2018. Since then, the stock price has grown by around 130%.

But it’s not only very young IT companies that have strong growth opportunities. Aveva is another FTSE 100 company listed in London, having been founded in 1967 in Cambridge as a government-funded research institute. Its annual average growth in stock price has been 182% since 2001.

Small caps and dividends

But if these factors have all played a role in why the FTSE 100 has compared poorly in price terms, there are several other important caveats that rather change the picture. First, the weakness has mainly been with the large blue-chip companies listed in the UK.

You can see this when you look at the FTSE 250, which is an index of smaller companies that tend to be based the UK rather than having the international dimension of the FTSE 100. Over the same 20-year period, the FTSE 250 is up 51.4% – well ahead of the Nikkei and not far behind the DAX.

Second, we have so far only looked at the raw price return of the FTSE 100. This ignores the fact that traditional companies of the kind that dominate the FTSE 100 also distribute dividends. To get a full view of companies’ performance, you have to factor these in too.

According to the calculations here, the same £1,000 invested into the FTSE 100 that we talked about at the beginning of the article would have approximately doubled over the last couple of decades if you included the income from dividends and continually reinvested it back into companies in the index. Below is a chart to show the comparison over just the last five years.

FTSE 100 Total Return vs FTSE 100

Though you would have to obtain the same data for our other indices to make a truly fair comparison, and I couldn’t source it all at the time of writing, the German DAX actually does include dividends in its numbers. So since it achieved 81.2% in our 20-year period, the UK returns turn out to be fairly similar.

Has the FTSE 100 really performed as badly this century as it appears? (2024)

FAQs

Why is the FTSE so bad? ›

Around 57% of the revenues of FTSE 250 companies now come from overseas, meaning that the index has also become more a play on world growth than it is on the economy at home5. That adds meaning to the index's current low rating in comparison with most other world stock markets.

What is the US equivalent of the FTSE 100? ›

The "FTSE" is the Financial Times Stock Exchange in the U.K. that is a provider of different indices, its most popular being the FTSE 100, which tracks the top 100 companies by market cap in the U.K. The U.S. version of this would be the S&P 500, which tracks the top 500 U.S. companies by market cap, or the Dow Jones ...

What is wrong with the UK stock market? ›

However, trading volume has slumped in recent years and some British companies have picked other markets to list their shares. That appears to fit the narrative of a nation whose economy is being held back by weak productivity, under-investment and the jolt to trade from Brexit.

Is the FTSE a good investment? ›

In 2022 amid the shock and awe of rapidly rising interest rates, the FTSE 100 secured a flat performance over the year even as most other world markets plunged. That's not, however, why most investors buy shares. They want growth or a growing income or both and returns that beat other asset classes over time.

Why has FTSE underperformed? ›

Train says there is consensus on why the FTSE has underperformed its rivals for most of the past decade, namely the lack of, or perceived lack of, big technology stocks in the index.

Will the FTSE bounce back? ›

Analysts are forecasting a robust 52% increase in the FTSE 100's aggregate pre-tax income in 2024 compared to 2018, with post-tax earnings expected to rise by 36%.

What is the difference between the Dow Jones and the FTSE? ›

FTSE 100 vs Dow Jones: Which is worth more? The FTSE 100 has a market cap of just £1.996 trillion, against Dow Jones' market cap of $10.35 trillion (about £8.25 trillion). The company with the largest weighting in the Dow Jones is UnitedHealth, which has a market cap of $463 billion (£369 billion).

What are the top 5 companies in the FTSE 100? ›

The top FTSE 100 companies are AstraZeneca, Shell, Linde, HSBC Holdings, Unilever Group, BP, Diageo, Rio Tinto Group, Glencore, British American Tobacco, and GlaxoSmithKline.

Is the London Stock Exchange in trouble? ›

Analysis of data by investment platform XTB also revealed that the number of firms listed on the London Stock Exchange has fallen by more than 25 per cent over the last decade, with the pace accelerating in 2023.

Why is London Stock Exchange failing? ›

One cause of the problem is probably the LSE's £20 billion acquisition of US data giant Refinitiv in 2021. Since then, one suspects that the LSE management has been distracted. Indeed, Chief Executive David Schwimmer made it clear recently that he saw the future in data rather than trading exchanges.

Why are UK stocks so low? ›

The canonical justification for London-listed stocks being cheap is simple. British pension funds have spent decades swapping shares for bonds and British securities for foreign ones, which has left less domestic capital on offer for companies listing in London.

Will FTSE recover in 2024? ›

Additionally, broker forecasts indicate the possibility of further growth in earnings and dividends in 2024. While challenges remain, there is hope that the FTSE 100 can regain its footing and deliver better performance in the future.

Is it safe to invest in the FTSE 100? ›

FTSE 100 companies are typically stable thanks to their size and reputation – but they're not immune from downturns. So it's always wise to spread your risk. You can buy FTSE 100 shares using InvestDirect, our share deaing platform. Fees and eligibility criteria apply.

Should I invest in FTSE 100 or S&P 500? ›

Over the past five years, the FTSE 100's annualised simple return is an inflation-lagging 2.2 per cent, or a full 11 percentage points below the S&P 500's yearly average. But factor in dividends, and the Footsie's annual total return triples.

Will the FTSE ever rise? ›

The FTSE 100 is broadly where it was before the pandemic-induced stock market crash, in the region of 7500 points. It had a decent rally towards the end of 2023, but has slipped during the early weeks of 2024. If you take a look over a longer timeframe, the FTSE 100 has risen over 8% in the past five years.

Should I invest in the S&P 500 or the FTSE 100? ›

Over the past five years, the FTSE 100's annualised simple return is an inflation-lagging 2.2 per cent, or a full 11 percentage points below the S&P 500's yearly average. But factor in dividends, and the Footsie's annual total return triples.

Is the FTSE 100 better than the S&P 500? ›

The S&P 500 contains 500 stocks, while the FTSE 100 is made up of just 100. The FTSE 100 is also a lot smaller than the S&P 500 in terms of market capitalisation – (as of March 2024) the FTSE 100 has a market cap of around £1.9 trillion, while the S&P's market cap is around $42.8 trillion (about £33.6 trillion).

Why is the FTSE so cheap? ›

The canonical justification for London-listed stocks being cheap is simple. British pension funds have spent decades swapping shares for bonds and British securities for foreign ones, which has left less domestic capital on offer for companies listing in London.

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