Top performing asset classes of 2019 revealed

What asset class do you think delivered the highest return for 2019? Could it be global shares? Emerging markets? Or the New Zealand share market? The results are now in!

Each year, Mercer produces its Periodic Table of investment returns. The Table colour-codes 16 major asset classes and ranks how each has performed, on an annual basis, over the last 10 years.  An interactive version of the Table is available below, along with a printable version.

Scrolling through the pages quickly highlights how challenging it is to unearth patterns and predict what the years ahead may hold. A high returning asset class may perform well again the next year, but at other times can change and occupy the bottom ranks.

Diversified funds, including the Conservative., Balanced, and Growth investment options, tend to have exposure to a collection of the asset classes contained in the Periodic Table.  Being well-exposed to growth assets was the recipe for high returns in 2019, but even those investors with relatively conservative portfolios should have had a pleasing year. 

Looking across the past decade, a number of observations can be made:
 

  • 2019 proved to be a very strong year for financial markets.  Every investment sector depicted generated a positive return - not normally a common event but the third time this has happened in the last four years.  2018 provides a contrast when 10 out of the 16 asset classes delivered a negative return.
     
  • Share markets across the world were buoyant in 2019 and New Zealand Equities topped the table with an exceptional 32% return.  Companies such as Fisher and Paykel Healthcare, Restaurant Brands and Port of Tauranga led the way. A low interest rate environment and a relatively robust economy underpinned the strength of our market, which has now bettered our Australian counterpart for nine years running.
     
  • Both New Zealand and Global Fixed Interest delivered solid single digit returns last year alongside a general fall in interest rates – adding to the number of offshore bonds trading at negative yields. While they couldn’t compete with the riskier asset classes, bonds gave a helpful boost for conservative investors. 
     
  • Cash and defensively-oriented Hedge Funds delivered modest returns in 2019. Both have been regular inhabitants of the lower half of the Table over the past decade. The same can be said of Commodities which, hampered by a low inflationary environment, produced a negative return in six out of the last 10 years. 
     
  • The biggest asset class bounce last year was Global Small Cap Equities, recovering from a -9% return in 2018 to generate +25% in 2019. Certainly a lesson in volatility for investors in that sector. 
     
  • There were few sizeable falls from grace in 2019. Having taken first ranking in 2018, Global Private Equity drifted down the rankings. However, to put this in context, the asset class has placed in the top half of the Table an impressive nine times over the past decade, benefiting those investors with tolerance for some illiquidity. 
     
  • Across the decade, the award for single highest annual return goes to Emerging Market Equities (+35% in 2017).  The sector also had the second-to-worst year with a -18% return in 2011, under-cut only by Commodities in 2015.
     
  • Overall, last year’s asset class returns were grouped within a 30% top-to-bottom range - similar to the prior two years’ and to the average for the decade as a whole.

We can never tell with a high degree of confidence what the future will hold for financial markets.  Their inherent volatility continues to be a reminder of the merits of asset class diversification.  
For many investors, a key takeaway is the importance of harnessing both time and patience - the big money to be made is often not in the buying and selling, but in the waiting.
Open the full report

This information has been prepared by Mercer (N.Z.) Limited for general information only. The information does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs.This information has been prepared by Mercer (N.Z.) Limited for general information only. The information does not take into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs.

20 March 2020