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EDITOR’S VIEW Are the worst performing sectors the best ones the following year?
EDITOR’S VIEW
Daniel Coatsworth
Are the worst performing sectors the best ones the following year?Worst performing FTSE 350 Worst performing FTSE 350 sectors in 2022
sectors in 2022
Discover the trends among FTSE 350 sectors over the past 16 years
There is a widely held view among many investors that a successful investment strategy is to buy the previous year’s losers. The idea is that bad news might be fully priced in, and you’re paying a cheaper price to buy something that could rebound on good news.
To test this theory, I looked at the performance of each FTSE 350 sector on an annual basis dating back to the start of 2007, a long enough period to encompass good and bad economic conditions.
The conclusions were fascinating but not as straightforward as one would hope. Rather than being a simple ‘worst performer one-year, best performer the next’, one can make the following observations.
The most economically sensitive sectors such as banking typically see feast or famine. They tend to see a bad period then a very good one, but each period often lasts two or three years before reversing, rather than alternating each year.
A good example is industrial metals and mining. It fell approximately 57% in 2007 and down another 84% in 2008 as the global financial crisis gripped the world. But in 2009 the sector jumped 307% and then rose a further 72% in 2010. Performance then reversed, falling 54% in 2011, down 29% in 2012 and dropped another 49% in 2013. The seesaw motion then continued, including a 212% surge in 2016 and a 71% rise the following year. The retail sector has seen similar trends, albeit not as extreme.
Some apparently defensive sectors did not offer a smooth ride including telecoms services and electricity. Investors might presume that paying for your broadband or electricity is non-discretionary
Worst performing FTSE 350 sectors in 2022
Automobiles & Parts
% change % change
−60
Automobiles & Parts Precious Metals & Mining
−60 −45 % change
Precious Metals & Mining Household Goods/Home Construction Household Goods/Home Construction Automobiles & Parts −45 −43 −43 −60
Table: Shares magazine • Source: SharePad, data to 9 Dec 2022 Precious Metals & Mining −45 Table: Shares magazine • Source: SharePad, data to 9 Dec 2022 Household Goods/Home Construction −43 and therefore the utility provider’s earnings are Table: Shares magazine • Source: SharePad, data to 9 Dec 2022 solid and growing, and so by extension the share price slowly ticks up. That certainly wasn’t the case with nine ‘down’ years out of 16 for the telecoms services sector.
Other defensive sectors were kinder to investors. Tobacco has only seen three ‘down’ years since 2007 and healthcare has been up 12 out of the past 16 years. The latter was matched by the beverages sector.
The data shows many of the more volatile sectors provided the highest average returns – a reflection that you’re taking on more risk in the hope of winning big. Industrial metals and mining was the most volatile sector and also the most rewarding, with an average 26.8% annual return between 2007 and 2022. The worst was telecoms equipment with an average 5.2% annual loss.
Beverages and chemicals provided the same average return at 10.8% yet most investors would accept that much greater risks come with the latter sector, given demand is highly leveraged to economic activity and input costs are unpredictable.
In general, the fact so many sectors eventually bounced back after a down period goes to show the importance of being patient. For example, anyone who sold out of consumer services after a 28% slump in 2018 would have then missed four straight years of gains.