From the editor...

4 min read

Andrew Van Sickle editor@moneyweek.com

America’s Nasdaq index has suffered its worst week since November 2022
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World War Three? The Magnificent Seven? So last week. An extraordinary amount of fanfare greeted the FTSE 100’s ascent to a new record closing high this week considering it almost happened a fortnight ago and was discussed to death then. Markets often display attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), fixating on something then suddenly dropping it and moving on to something else.

It is of course good news that the FTSE 100 has finally limped over the 8,000 mark. A bit of schadenfreude may have provided additional impetus and good cheer. While more encouraging macroeconomic data and some solid earnings reports boosted optimism on this side of the Atlantic, on Wall Street the main indices have been struggling, with the technology-heavy Nasdaq recording its worst five days since November 2022 last week (a drop of almost 4%). The blue-chip S&P 500 index is now around 5.5% below its record peak of three weeks ago.

The old economy has aged well

It is a good week, then, to be reminded of the appeal of the old-economy sectors the FTSE specialises in. For instance, says John Authers on Bloomberg, defence group Rolls-Royce has quadrupled since 1 January 2023, easily outpacing the US Magnificent Seven, which has merely doubled since then in sterling terms. You will find a smaller, but equally promising defence stock on page 24.

A longer-term view of sectors in and out of favour helps explain part of the British market’s long-term ups and downs (see page 5). The FTSE 100 outstripped the S&P 500 in US dollar terms between the end of the post-dotcom bust and the peak of the mortgage bubble in 2007. The financial and raw materials industries help explain that (it was the era of the commodities supercycle) and once the credit bubble burst, there was no technology bubble here to compensate.

Despite the record high, the UK market is still the cheapest big global market on a price/earnings (p/e) ratio of ten, as Jim Mellon pointed out this week. And we get a double discount if we buy Britain through cheap investment trusts (see page 17). My recent series of MoneyWeek podcasts, sponsored by IG and available on Spotify, provides plenty of additional ideas worth investing in with trusts. On the subject of MoneyWeek, I would also like to draw your attention to our new series of Readers’ Choice Awards to help us find the top providers of investing, saving and banking