Left In The Dirt: What’s Driving Our Sharemarket Performance?

 | Dec 01, 2017 14:32

Originally published by BetaShares

The Australian sharemarket has struggled to match the performance of global peers in recent years. While a number of theories have been put forward to explain our relatively poor returns, this note suggests two factors tend to dominate: trends in export commodity prices and the health of the global technology sector. On this basis, it seems likely our market could struggle against global peers for some time yet.

h2 Recent Australian relative equity performance/h2

Australian equities have tended to underperform the global benchmark in recent years, though the degree of underperformance does depend on how returns are measured.

On a pure price basis (i.e. before dividends), the S&P/ASX 200 Index since end-2012 has produced annualised gains of only 4.3% p.a. (to end-September), compared with 10.1% p.a. for the MSCI All-Country World Index on a local currency basis. Allowing for the fact Australian companies pay higher dividends, however, the difference in total returns is not as great – with total returns for the local market of 9.1% p.a. compared to 12.3% p.a. for the global benchmark. Allowing for franking credits on Australian dividends would further narrow this gap on a comparable gross or “pre-tax” basis.

That said, it’s traditional to benchmark local equity returns against unhedged Australian dollar returns from global markets – and on this basis, the difference again widens due to the decline in the Australian dollar in recent years. Indeed, over this period, for example, the Australian dollar has fallen from $US1.03 to US78c. Accordingly, in Australian dollar terms, the MSCI All-Country Index has delivered stronger price and total return gains over this period of 14.8% p.a. and 16.6% p.a. respectively.