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What’s In Your Tracker Today?

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By

Stuart J Watson

From the Fool blog

Local Police Station Is Useless!

Published in Investing Strategy on 10 October 2008

We look at how the stock market wreckage of the last year has affected the make-up of the FTSE 100 index.

Where do we go from here is the question many investors have at the moment. I can’t claim to have the answer but, as far as the UK stock market goes, perhaps we can find some clues by looking at which companies dominate the FTSE 100 index and therefore govern the fortunes of many index trackers.

Here’s how the top ten looks as I write:

Company

Market cap
 £bn

Forward P/E ratio

Forward dividend yield

HSBC (LSE: HSBA)

106.3

12.4

5.3%

Royal Dutch Shell (LSE: RDSB)

91.6

5.3

5.2%

BP (LSE: BP)

78.1

5.1

6.3%

Vodafone (LSE: VOD)

63.8

8.9

6.3%

GlaxoSmithKline (LSE: GSK)

60.1

11.3

4.6%

AstraZeneca (LSE: AZN)

33.2

9.1

4.2%

Tesco (LSE: TSCO)

30.0

13.2

2.9%

BG (LSE: BG)

27.3

9.0

1.2%

Rio Tinto (LSE: RIO)

26.2

5.3

2.5%

Br Am Tobacco (LSE: BATS)

25.4

13.3

4.2%

Average

 

9.0

4.9%

 

A couple of notes on the above for any fellow investment geeks: I’ve reduced the market value of British American Tobacco to reflect the fact it only has a 75% weighting in the FTSE 100 index due to presence of a major corporate shareholder. Secondly, the average figures for the forward P/E ratio and dividend yield have been calculated by weighting each company according to its market value.

How has the FTSE 100 changed?

The top half of this list consists of the same five companies it did back in December 2006. The order has changed at the very top however. Somewhat surprisingly HSBC, one of the few banks to have remained relatively unscathed over the last year, has leapfrogged both BP and Shell to take pole position. Indeed HSBC is now worth almost double the amount of the four other big UK banks combined.

The three banks that were formerly in the top ten, Royal Bank of Scotland (LSE: RBS), HBOS (LSE: HBOS) and Barclays (LSE: BARC) have made way for Tesco, BG and British American Tobacco. The only other change is that Rio Tinto has replaced fellow mining behemoth Anglo American (LSE: AAL). Given all that’s happened since the end of 2006, you could argue the make-up of the FTSE 100 index has changed surprisingly little.

Big caps still dominate

One criticism that has been levelled against UK index trackers as an investment is that they are concentrated on too few companies. Nothing has changed in that regard, indeed the top ten companies now make up around 51% of the FTSE 100 index compared with 47% back in December 2006. I don’t have figures to hand but I suspect this is the highest proportion for quite some time.

However, I don’t think many investors will see this concentration as top of their list of concerns at the moment! These ten companies are predominantly well funded and internationally diversified – which is just what’s needed at the moment.

How reliable are these forecasts?

Although I’ve included forecast data in the table there is obviously a big question mark over how reliable these figures are. When the economy suffers, analysts’ forecasts often lag reality and ultimately prove to be too optimistic.

Many of these companies have seen their earnings forecasts downgraded already this year although the figures for the two oilies and Rio don’t yet reflect the recent decline in commodity prices that could hit their profits in the second half of this year.

Knocking 10% off forecast profits would result in an average forward P/E ratio of about 10 times. That’s cheap with interest rates at just 4.5%. But then I said pretty much exactly the same thing when the FTSE 100 index was both 1,000 and 2,000 points higher than it is today. Being cheap counts for very little when nobody wants to buy.

More: Top Ten Trackers

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Comments

The opinions expressed here are those of the individual writers and are not representative of The Motley Fool. If you spot any comments that are unsuitable hit the flag to alert our moderators.

gazza123 11 Oct 2008, 5:18am

What is best? To buy up sharres of gold companies or but gold bulllion as such?

Gazza

Growth1234 11 Oct 2008, 12:21pm

I think whats striking is how diversified the top ten are.Ive invested since i was 14 and i cant really believe the yields and p/es on the top ten at the moment.Most of them churn cash out and will be buying back shares and slowly increasing divis.If your just an average Jo (like me) a monthly contribution to a FTSE 100 tracker right now (ISA of course) seems a no-brainer.In all this panic youl make money long term unless we end up back in caves,and then it wouldnt matter anyway.I love the fact ok my fund is down but im getting so many units for my money,in fact ive upped my monthly payment as high as i can afford.Only money id of spent on something anyway,and im hopeing the market doesnt recover for a while because the more units i get at these prices (or lower) the better.

biosh 12 Oct 2008, 8:52am

"One criticism that has been levelled against UK index trackers as an investment is that they are concentrated on too few companies"

Does this mean that these funds buy equal numbers of shares in each of the companies, rather than investing an equal amount of money in each company? I thought it was the latter.

biosh 12 Oct 2008, 10:30am

".........funds buy equal numbers of shares in each of the companies, rather than investing an equal amount of money in each company?"

Having thought about this. It must be the former or they wouldn't track the index! Duh!

Chongq 12 Oct 2008, 3:26pm

Being a little repetitive the dividend and P/e figures understate the 'actuals, already being achieved. BP pays a dividend in UD$ which are converted to pounds near the date of payment. the effect which we will see in the third quarter results is a 10-20$ increase from the figures shown for dividend and a similar reduction for P/E.
this is substantially true for all others on your list in the sense that 50%++ earnings are in dollars or better still yen. Q3 results for the big boys especially dividends should be exciting & arguably the turning point we have all been looking for

Growth1234 13 Oct 2008, 10:57am

Chongq,like you i take great stock on the pound\dollar exchange rate,Glaxosmithkline (i worked for them) make alomost all their profits in the US,BAT another really benefits from a weak pound.I think the value in the market is at the top end.The yields very well covered by earnings are what you want long term and the all share yielding over 5%?.Too me if your not prepared to buy stocks like those above at these prices then you should never ever invest in equities.

CunningCliff 13 Oct 2008, 12:54pm

Growth1234, you seem like a sensible person. While others have been panic selling, I have been panic buying! ;0)

Cliff (Fool freelancer and fellow GSK owner)

Growth1234 13 Oct 2008, 5:20pm

Cunningcliff iv upped my ftse all share tracker to the max monthly contribution last month and given up takeaways and such like to pay for the extra.My first job i worked with a man who invested 10% of his factory wage every month in an index trust,never batted an eyelid on the ups and downs,when i asked him why he replied,you dont retire on capital you retire on income,and only shares,only shares over the long term will grow your income at or above inflation,and if they havent over 30 years well you can bet your life nothing else has,you dont buy a share price you buy the income it will pay you over your lifetime,wise words.

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