The global and local share outlook for 2025 and what every investor must know
It’s going to be difficult to beat the returns we just pulled in over the past 12 months so what should investors expect and what should they be wary of in the new year?
If you want to know what’s going to happen to your investments over the next year, the best place to start is by taking note of what has happened over the past year.
And the past 12 months has been very good indeed. It’s been absolutely superb for US shares and exceptionally good for Australian shares.
But don’t think that a total return on the ASX for the year at more than 18 per cent is standard fare. It’s not. It’s more like twice the level you might reasonably expect.
For sharemarket investors, especially exchange traded fund investors, the writing is on the wall. The S&P 500 has just returned 30 per cent and the Nasdaq did 37 per cent; it’s rarely been this easy to make money.
Let’s cut to the chase. Regardless of earnings estimates or US tax cuts, we will be very lucky to get returns that are anything close to those numbers again in 2025.
Also never forget inflation is back, so being realistic you need to subtract 3 per cent from your returns on asset class to make an accurate assessment of your spending power.
Nevertheless, one of the smartest tenets of investing is that it’s not what you think is going to happen that matters, but what everyone else thinks. The official groupthink is what we call “consensus forecasts”.
As an investor you don’t need to believe these forecasts, but it is crucial that you know what they are.
Here’s what you need to know about the outlook for share markets in the year ahead:
To keep it simple, let’s just look at overseas markets with a special mention for gold stocks – and local markets with a special mention for the listed property sector.
Global markets
With Wall Street now utterly dominating the global share index, what happens in the US will dictate what happens on all other listed markets next year. And before you hear the consensus forecast for Wall Street, keep one thing in mind – this time last year the pundits thought the S&P 500 would finish calendar 2024 near 4600.
As it turns out the S&P 500 has sailed above 6,000. Yep, they got it wrong.
The thing is the market pundits underestimated returns and that will always be forgiven. In contrast, if the pundits over-estimate returns they make long-term enemies.
Either way, we must hear them out. After all, these people are paid enormous salaries to try to guess the future. The consensus view on the outlook for the S&P 500 in 2025 is about 8 per cent. And if you add 2 per cent dividends this assumes a perfectly reasonable year – except that it would offer returns that are less than one third of 2024.
Listed gold
Gold is the ultimate global commodity that happens to offer Australian share investors a particularly extensive menu on the ASX.
The issue with gold forecasts is simple. Everyone in the gold industry is invariably of the opinion that gold is going to go up, and fair enough; gold went up around 30 per cent over the past 12 months.
As usual the analysts believe gold will rise again in 2025 and this year with the return of Donald Trump to the White House it’s difficult to argue against them.
For gold stock investors, it’s all about whether the company you pick can deliver what it says it will deliver. Resolute Mining is a market favourite but who could guess its CEO, Terry Holohan, would be detained by Mali’s ruling junta, prompting a $500m sell-off in the stock?
We now get to the end of a year whereby gold went up 30 per cent and Resolute is down 2 per cent. Meanwhile, rivals Northern Star is up 35 per cent and Evolution Mining is up 42 per cent.
If you access gold through local shares your risk – upside or downside – is intensified.
The ASX
Guess what? The ASX is expected to do very little in 2025.
Of course we heard that last year too. Yet over 2024 it looks like the ASX 200 will come rolling in with a lift in prices equal to 14 per cent. On top of that you can add dividends which should be more than 4 per cent, creating a total return of at least 18 per cent (before franking).
Forecasters got it utterly wrong about the ASX in 2024 because they continually called a “sell” on stocks which just kept pushing higher.
The outstanding example is that financial stocks were up 34 per cent for the year.
CBA, the biggest bank stock is up – wait for it – 45 per cent this year (you can add the 3 per cent dividend yield on that too).
Virtually all the brokers say bank stocks are now a “sell”. Perhaps it is time to take profits here as the likelihood that CBA will do 45 per cent again in 2025 would be similar to the chances of being struck by lightning … on your birthday.
Viewing the ASX on a sectoral basis, the other key forecasts related to resource stocks. Mining is represented by “materials” which fell by 7 per cent over the past 12 months, and energy stocks which managed a dreadful drop of 17 per cent.
Global X ETFs investment strategist Marc Jocum says: “Some of the worst performing sectors have actually been energy and materials. On that basis next year there could be a little bit of mean reversion.”
When you strip out the outliers, most forecasters say the ASX will offer almost nothing in price gains, leaving us with just the market’s dividend yield which is close to 4 per cent.
Listed property
The interest rate cuts never came in 2024. In fact we end the year with the same cash rate we had in January – 3.5 per cent. All up, national home values were up around 5.5 per cent over the past year while commercial property values were mixed.
Nonetheless, after a very tough spell, the listed property sector turned the corner in 2024 with A-REITs gaining 22 per cent.
Emboldened by these numbers and ready to vacuum up investor enthusiasm for anything related to the artificial intelligence boom, the float of David Di Pilla’s group was billed as the biggest float of the year when it came to the sharemarket on Friday morning.
It’s early days, but the float fizzled in its first session, with DigiCo barely budging from its $5 IPO price in early trading.
It looks like listed property could offer another year of recovery in 2025 but the DigiCo float has tested the limits of investor enthusiasm.
James Kirby presents the twice-weekly Money Puzzle podcast