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Most popular ASX lithium names on trading platforms in ’22, plus ETFs, energy and US stocks!

What were the darlings of investors in 2022? We’ve spoken to top share trading platforms to find out.

Most times, it's great to be popular! Picture: Getty Images
Most times, it's great to be popular! Picture: Getty Images

Wondered what has been the most popular ASX stocks on the share trading platforms for 2022?

Let’s take a look …

The Superhero annual Year in Trades shows that last year’s most traded Australian company, Zip (ASX:ZIP), fell off the most traded list for 2022, to be replaced with a lithium miner.


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The top five most traded Australian companies between January 1, 2022 and 30 November 2022 on the Superhero platform were:

The lithium carbonate price has increased about 23 per cent in 2020, about 445 per cent in 2021 and in the year to November 2022 around 104 per cent.

CXO has seen its price rise by about 70 per cent year to date, while PLS, FMG and BHP are also up.

However AI-chip developer BRN hasn’t been so fortunate, with its share price slumping ~12 per cent year to date.

Superhero’s top five most traded US companies – between January 1 and November 30 were:

  • Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)
  • Apple (Nasdaq:AAPL)
  • Alphabet (Nasdaq:GOOGL)
  • Amazon (Nasdaq:AMZN)
  • Microsoft (Nasdaq:MSFT)

Buying more than selling

Net buys on Superhero outnumbered net sell trades in 2022, with seven out of 10 trades on a buy trade.

ETFs were more popular with younger investors with around 50 per cent of Superhero customers between 18 and 32 trading either Australian or US ETFs in 2022.

When it came to ETFs, 83 per cent of trades were buys, which Superhero said indicated investors were continuing to build their portfolios through the diversification provided by the funds.


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Energy and gold popular on Moomoo

At Moomoo the top five most traded ASX companies between January 1, 2022 and 30 November 2022 weren’t lithium.

AGL’s share price has risen about 28 per cent year to date. The company in November announced plans to close its Torrens Island B gas power station in South Australia on June 30, 2026, aiming to transform the site into a low-carbon industrial energy hub.

Gold producing giant NST has watched its share price rise more than 16 per cent year to date. Inflation and gold prices trending higher can only be good news for even the gold juniors according to Stockhead’s Barry Fitzgerald.

Moomoo Vice president and chief market strategist Matt Wilson said the perfroamance BOQ was a surprise, but QBE’s place in his top five made sense.

“Insurance is an interesting one – when inflation was going up, insurance stocks had the pricing power and somewhat benefit from an inflationary market,” he said.

“QBE is the kind of stock that would benefit from inflation, and in this market people were looking for investments that would prosper.

“It is also likely that QBE sits within a lot of self-managed super funds, that tend to buy portfolio stocks.”

BBOZ most popular by trading value

Wilson said most popular by total trading value were:

Here’s where lithium – which has been the big story of 2022 – makes an appearance on Moomoo’s lists, with NVX specialising in lithium-ion batteries used to power electric vehicles, mobile phones and energy storage units.

“In 2022 one of the key events for Novonix was the announcement of a $US150 million grant from the US government to assist in developing electric vehicle technology,” Wilson said.

“The fact that the BBOZ was the No.1 share traded by market value suggests the Moomoo client base has been very bearish on markets in 2022.”

The top five most traded US companies between January 1, 2022 and 30 November 2022 on Moomoo were:

  • Tesla
  • Uber Technologies (NYSE:UBER)
  • Amazon
  • NVIDIA Corporation (Nasdaq:NVDA)

Top ETFs of 2022

Over at Stockspot – an online investment advisor which builds custom portfolios using exchange traded funds – founder and CEO Chris Brycki told Stockhead the most popular ETFs for 2022 ranged from regular portfolios to ESG-strong funds and overseas-focused choices.

In Stockspot’s regular portfolios, Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF (ASX:VAS) was the most popular. It was followed by iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (ASX:IEM), which invests in a range of emerging market countries such as China, India and Taiwan.

For clients investing in Stockspot’s green/sustainable portfolios top choice was Betashares Australian Sustainability Leaders ETF (ASX:FAIR) and VanEck MSCI International Sustainable Equity ETF (ASX:ESGI).

FAIR invests in sustainability-driven Australian companies engaged in positive environmental business activities, while ESGI invests in global companies, targeting environmental, social and governance leaders.

Other popular ETFs chosen by Stockspot clients include BetaShares NASDAQ 100 ETF (ASX:NDQ) and iShares S&P 500 ETF (ASX:IVV)

NDQ invests in the largest 100 non-financial companies listed on the tech-focused US, while the NASDAQ fund invests in the largest 500 companies listed on the US S&P 500 index.

Crystal ball gazing into 2023

Wilson said the broad themes of 2022 including inflation, the war in Ukraine and energy price rises were likely to continue into 2023.

“The big questions for 2023 revolves around whether inflation has peaked, when central banks will stop raising interest rates and whether the Australian economy goes into recession for the first time since 1991-92,” he said.

“And we can never rule out geopolitical tensions regarding oil, gas and iron ore exports.”

Brycki said there were a lot of factors influencing markets and nobody knew how these would pan out for markets in combination.

Brycki said uncertainty was all the more reason to own a diversified portfolio that can perform in different environments and stick with an automated strategy for rebalancing.

“The best way to embrace uncertainty and sleep at night is to be diversified,” he said.

So, what is Wilson’s advice to investors heading into 2023?

“Take this opportunity to recalibrate your investment portfolio with shares that you are comfortable to hold such as those with longer-term revenue generation, profitability, market position and adaptability,” he said.

This content first appeared on stockhead.com.au

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/stockhead/most-popular-asx-lithium-names-on-trading-platforms-in-22-plus-etfs-energy-and-us-stocks/news-story/d3f5b662ebc7e8202cc8ae69f9aabe82