Did you wake up on Wednesday ready to HODL? Your brain addled with FOMO? Your eyes on the horizon, heart set on Going To The Moon?
You’re a Monevator reader so probably not. Amen to that!
Still, I believe there’s a place for Bitcoin in sensible portfolios. Hence I welcomed the FCA’s reversal on banning us from getting crypto exposure via exchange-traded notes (ETNs) linked to cryptocurrencies.
The new rules came in on 8 October. My co-blogger wrote a huge guide to the ins and outs of crypto ETNs in advance.
But then Wednesday rolled around, and from what I could tell from my platforms we still couldn’t buy crypto ETNs.
…any keen investor looking to get in early will have been disappointed to find that despite the ban lifting, these ETN products are still not available to retail investors.
In fact, investors will have to wait until at least 13 October before they are able to but crypto ETNs.
The delay comes as a result ETN providers being required to submit their prospectuses for FCA approval before they can offer these products.
However, the FCA only began accepting draft prospectuses on 25 September.
According to Financial Times sources, one person familiar with the matter said the FCA and the London Stock Exchange were ‘going back and forth’ on whether they needed a new segment of the exchange for these crypto products.
So much for the UK getting back on the front foot when it comes to innovation and whatnot, eh?
Musical shares
Indeed it gets worse! Several readers (including an industry insider) forwarded me a link to further ‘guidance’ from HMRC.
Why the air quotes? Well, does this extract from the document seem like a clear route forward to you?
Initially, cETNs will be automatically eligible for inclusion in stocks and shares ISAs.
From 6 April 2026, they will be reclassified as qualifying investments within the Innovative Finance ISA (IFISA).
Say what now? Crypto ETNs will be allowed in ISAs – but then next year they’ll need to be shifted over to Innovative Finance ISAs? A wrapper some aficionados have been mentally moving on to the extinction-watch Red List?
Many brokers do not even offer Innovative ISAs. Are they going to build and get regulatory approval for them by April? Remember the FCA didn’t approve crypto ETNs in time for its own launch date.
My industry contact noted we saw similar shenanigans with Long-Term Asset Funds. These were initially only available in Innovative Finance ISAs. But from April 2026 you can hold them in normal ISAs after all.
Why all the kerfuffle and making life complicated? (Also, if you’re wondering what a Long-Term Asset Fund is then you’ve sort of proved my point.)
It’s hard to even find a list of the crypto ETNs that should get approval from the FCA. I eventually found this one at the broker Saxo. No idea if it’s accurate or complete.
Remember similar products have been busily trading in Europe and the US for many years now.
Who gives a sausage?
I asked my co-blogger The Accumulator for his thoughts on this Innovative Finance ISA crypto curveball.
TA was non-plussed:
Seems a bit like fractional shares again. Some traffic warden in a position of authority is saying: “well actually if you look at subsection 3, paragraph 6…”
But eventually a coalition of forces will shout, “broken Britain” at them enough times that they’ll just go, “yeah fuckit, just put it in an ISA, who gives a shit?”
Thinking about this – and whether the upcoming Budget will see the pension tax-free lump sum scrapped or stamp duty revamped or pension relief curbed – I feel a shiver of despair.
How can we help ordinary people get less confused about saving and investing when the powers-that-be seem bent on making everything as uncertain as possible?
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The US stock market is expensive by historical standards. Given that it now comprises almost three-quarters of some global index trackers, by association those funds look pricey too.
For instance, here’s the geographic exposure of the iShares Core MSCI World global tracker fund (ticker: SWDA):
Some readers expressed scepticism when I began pointing out the US was about two-thirds of global markets a year or two back. Now its plus-plus-sized status is indisputable.
I wonder if screenshotting that factsheet above for evidence will seem like some kind of symbol of the excess in years to come?
“People used to just accept it as normal that the US market should be more than 70% of global trackers,” they may say in 2035. “Doofuses!”
But no, people are not complacent. Almost everyone who pays attention to what’s in their portfolio – investors who’d call themselves investors – knows the score. And it often worries them.
A reader emailed me this week:
There’s been a big uptick recently in warnings about stock markets being in bubble territory – not just from pundits, but from the likes of the Bank of England, the IMF and Jamie Dimon.
So how should a basically passive investor – who nonetheless does think bubbles can happen and that we have an AI bubble now – behave in such circumstances?
Personally, if I owned the global stock market – with around 70% in US equities, heavily weighted towards tech stocks – I’d be feeling really jittery. I’ve already skewed my equity holdings somewhat away from US equities.
People are making the obvious comparison with the dotcom boom, which was succeeded by a decade of sluggish returns in US stocks. But not many people – including, I expect, not many of your readers – were heavily invested at the time.
Obviously Monevator doesn’t provide advice, but I expect it can provide some helpful ways to think about this!
I’ve had a dozen emails or comments like this in the past month. Often they’ll add they know Monevator doesn’t write about such matters – market timing, boo hiss – but could we make an exception?
This is puzzling to me because we do write about such stuff. Quite often!
Indeed I sometimes fret that we write about it too much, and so potentially put would-be passive investors on a path to meme stock punting.
Today then I’ll answer our (splendid) reader’s question by pointing you towards a few of those answers we’ve given earlier.
Firstly, what exactly are we worried about?
Discussion about frothy market levels may conflate at least four things:
The market being very high, or…
Up a lot over a short period, or…
It being expensive, or…
It being overvalued on some metric such as P/E, or…
All of the above
I’m not being pedantic. These statements imply different things. Taking action with a passive portfolio on account of any of them will probably do more harm than good for most people, most of the time – that’s what the data says anyway – so you should know what is bothering you before you try to fix it.
For instance, a market may appear expensive on the basis of P/E multiples. But if we’ve been in a recession that’s ending and earnings are set to bounce back, a high P/E will rapidly come down.
Or: markets can go up very quickly and keep going up for many years more. They can rise especially fast out of bear markets – when, ironically, investors may be too shellshocked to trust those gains.
Also a stock market isn’t expensive just because it is ‘high’. During a 40-year investing career you’d hope to see the major indices hit many all-time highs.
The S&P 500 index was well under 1,000 in the mid-1990s. Now it’s pushing 7,000:
The S&P has returned more than 800% over the past three decades, and that’s before dividends. Selling just because it’s ‘up a lot’ is silly.
And yet many investors – even old-timers – seem to see equity markets as like sine waves, to be surfed on the ascent and pulled out of before they tumble.
Yes, day-to-day – even year-to-year – stock markets can be as choppy as any semi-rideable British seaside wave.
But long-term investing in shares is much more like mountain climbing than surfing.
The US market is expensive
Arguably the most credible guide to a market being genuinely expensive in light of all this is the CAPE aka Shiller aka P/E ratio. All names for basically the same thing – a metric that reflects the price you’re paying for company earnings averaged over a longer time period.
Such a ratio aims to smooth out the peaks and troughs of economic cycles and market tumult, and so to give a better long-term reckoning.
However in a very venerable CAPE ratio explainer for Monevator I wrote:
…cyclically-adjusted PEs may be a useful tool, but I don’t think they’re the silver bullet they’re sometimes touted as.
Read that post to learn more about cyclically-adjusted P/E ratios. Then push on for more thoughts about how much to really care about what they are saying.
So what is the ratio suggesting now?
Going by the Shiller-flavoured PE ratio, yes the US market looks very expensive:
The last time we approached these levels was on the eve of the Dotcom crash. Even our youngest readers will have heard about what happened then. If you’re ever going to judge it be squeaky-bum time on the basis of P/E ratios then now is the time, at least when it comes to US stocks.
Last week I included a similar graph in my Mogulspost. The ratio was below 40 then, so we’ve already pushed above it.
It’s not inconceivable the ratio could moderate without a bust. Perhaps advances in AI really will unlock huge productivity gains and boost earnings beyond all imagining. Maybe it could even do that, somehow, without simultaneously capsizing the rest of the economy and its incumbents.
Either way, the justification for using long-term cyclically-adjusted valuation multiples is we’ve heard this sort of story many times before – railroads, mainframes, biotech, Internet stocks – and it tends to end the same way. Excess followed by retrenchment. The results are in that graph.
People thought it was different those previous times, too. And it generally was in some ways, as far as society is concerned.
But for stock market investors it mostly wasn’t.
Can market levels or valuation help with market timing?
Again yes and no. But mostly no.
While confident-sounding pundits and bloggers are forever mining and showing off new indicators, the consensus of the academic research is that even the cyclically-adjusted ratio is a lousy timing tool.
Nobel Prize-winning Professor Robert Shiller – who gave his name to one flavour of such ratios – has said much the same thing in the past.
Also, you’ll notice I said ‘academic research’. Finding cute ratios or indicators in a dataset and ruthlessly applying them in a model is one thing. Actually implementing this stuff in real and crazy life – when markets are ripping or swan-diving – is another.
Perhaps that’s a good thing.
This is survivorship bias and anecdote speaking of course, but I’d bet more money has been lost this century by people too scared of investing in appropriate size after the Dotcom bust and the Financial Crisis than by those who took a pounding and supposedly sold at the bottom of a bear, never to return.
Still, a high cyclically-adjusted P/E ratio has ultimately been shown to be the best of a bad bunch of potential indicators when it comes to estimating future returns.
Again that ‘best’ is doing the heavy lifting. A Vanguard study found the ratio had historically explained about 40% of future returns. Better than the alternatives, but that still left 60% of returns to account for.
You Shilly boy
Want more evidence? The article I linked to above where Shiller warned that his ten-year cyclically-adjusted ratio wasn’t a timing tool hails from 2014.
In that same piece Shiller nevertheless opined that when it came to US stocks, “It looks like a peak”.
The US is up about four-fold since then. I imagine he’s glad he hedged his bets.
This market timing stuff isn’t easy. It’s either hard or not possible.
Certainly it only looks easy in hindsight. But people predict crashes literally all the time, so someone will sometimes be proved right, even by chance, and they will later dine out on it. So it goes.
Incidentally if you’re thinking “it is easy if you study Fibonnacci levels or Kondratiev waves” – in other words technical analysis – then (a) I’m skeptical and (b) this isn’t the article for you and (c) I still reckon if it ever works then that it’s only obvious in hindsight. With knobs on!
Many readers assume Monevator is against all forms of market-timing, second-guessing, or risk management through portfolio reshuffling.
However that puts our position far too dogmatically.
For a start I’m in the mix. I’m an active investor and I’m all too happy chopping and changing around.
The key for me – and a suggestion I’d make to other active investors – is to at least try to understand the risks and downsides of carrying on this way. Think performance chasing, loss aversion, excessive costs, FOMO, over-confidence, and a gamut of other behavioural and mathematical reasons why churning your portfolio willy-nilly is probably not the route to riches. Know the rules before you break them.
So much for active investors. But Monevator suggests passive investing in index funds is the best approach for most readers. So that’s the real question. Not how well I’m taming my overactive chimp brain from one day to the next.
Fair… but my passively-minded co-blogger The Accumulator is also quite pragmatic about such matters.
Passive up to a point
For example, TA has tweaked our Slow & Steady Passive Portfolio several times. And he’s not shown himself to be averse to trying to swerve from egregiously expensive markets, either. Think of his classic post in 2016 warning of the risks baked into index-linked gilts.
However taking action should never be the default for passive investors. Quite the opposite: don’t just do something – stand there!
As TA writes:
…how do you tell when the moment has come for legit evasive manoeuvres – as opposed to the standard knee-jerk fiddling that just amounts to ill-advised market timing?
I think the trigger for positive action is when we’re approaching a market extreme.
The mental image that illustrates such a moment for me is the Death Star moving into firing position against the Rebels in Star Wars.
The battle station slowly rounds the intervening gas giant that stands between the good guys and planet-killing laser death…
You don’t get that kind of imagery in corporate emails from your broker, eh?
Read on for more (alleged) heresy for passive investors:
For slam dunk proof that Monevator does discuss these issues, my co-blogger talked about market timing only two months ago.
The Accumulator wrote:
It’s because equities have proven resilient over time that long-term investors stay in the market, regardless of short-term wobbles.
Trying to predict the perfect entry point often means missing out on growth because there is never a ‘safe’ time to invest.
I’d add that you should always think about your time horizon when making decisions. We can’t predict the future, but the balance of probabilities over different time frames means the answer to whether you can reasonably be fully exposed to US equities today is different if you’re 30 compared to if you’re 60.
Over the past decade or so, a lot of the returns from equities – and nearly all the (apparent) froth – is down to technology stocks. At least with respect to companies big enough to move the index dial.
And because the technology sector is to the US stock market what the original Star Wars trilogy is to the nine episode Star Wars canon – that is, only a third of the total but delivering most of the gains – the US markets have been the ones most affected by the long boom in tech.
Oh, and there may be an AI bubble in progress. Or an AI revolution. Pick a side!
At least this focus on US tech affords us an easy way to reduce exposure to what seems to be an expensive stock market: we can dial down tech and/or US stocks.
We saw how US equities dominate global index funds and how a handful of giant tech/growth companies in turn comprise a large chunk of the US market.
One counter then would be to hold a wider spread of US companies.
You could track an equally-weighted index, for instance, instead of a market cap-weighted one. You could reduce your exposure to larger US growth stocks and add small or mid cap US shares or US value stocks.
There are countless options.
The snag? Only that I wrote that in March 2024. Since then the S&P 500 is up another 30% or so.
I have my defences. My members’ post is several thousand words long, for one thing. It belabours the uncertainty, and it explicitly says staying invested and letting the market decide is a perfectly rational plan for passive investors. I also even note that doubling down on tech and trying to maximise exposure to the rally (/bubble) could be a justifiable thing for active investors to do, too.
Also my article never said ‘get out of stocks’. On the contrary it said:
…whatever you do don’t sell all your equities!
Baby steps is the way forward. It’s one thing to modestly tilt away from what may be an extreme in a particular market. It’s another to start making all-in and all-out bets.
In my piece I made a case for more diversification into global stocks – which since March 2024 have done fine, and even better than fine in pound terms – and for shifting to track equal-weighted or value-tilted US indices, to reduce your giant tech exposure.
In doing so investors who underweighted US stocks in early 2024 could still be sitting pretty today is my point – even as US tech has continued its Icarus ascent. So I’ve no regrets.
Besides, when people fret about the US markets diving, I don’t think they’re concerned with maximising short-term gains. They are fretful about a Dotcom-style wipeout of their portfolio.
That’s certainly my perspective, and I’ve been underweight US stocks for at least 18 months now.
The other thing I reminded readers in my 2024 article is that equities – be they US or otherwise – are not the only fruit:
Why not simply reduce your overall equity risk? You curb how badly a US market correction would hit your wealth, without trying to pick favourites among the different regions.
The standard way to alter risk levels with a passive portfolio is just to reduce your equity allocation and increase your bond allocation. (Bonds that are finally set to deliver reasonable returns again, after their big price reset.)
If you were invested 80% in equities and 20% bonds – an 80/20 split – then you could shift to a 60/40 split, for example.
Again, endless permutations.
Now it’s true government bonds haven’t seen much of a recovery from the post-2022 wreckage. But as we’ve explained before, that smash-up left them in a far stronger starting place to deliver decent returns in future. Expected returns are very positive, compared to negative in the years running up to 2022.
Meanwhile corporate and high-yield bonds have been going great guns, thanks to low defaults and relatively high income payouts.
Such bonds would be hot potatoes to hold in a recession, true. But they’d probably do okay in a stock market correction driven by a hype-cycle bursting. Particularly if the US cut rates to help steady the ship.
Needless to say gold has been an excellent diversifier of late. How much farther its stupendous rally can run is well above my pay grade – and outside the scope of this article!
Ironically, one reason not to panic over whether we’re in a stock market bubble is the way that nearly everyone seems to believe we are.
You can barely turn on Bloomberg or CNBC, read an investing newsletter, or talk to a fellow private investor online or off without hearing that we’re in a crazy AI bubble that the unwashed masses cannot see for what it is.
Here’s what Google Trends has to say about the popularity of the search term ‘stock market bubble’:
When the masses all think that we’re in a bubble, then it’s definitionally difficult to believe that we are.
Time will tell. Personally I think stuff looks peaky, and I’ve said so today and elsewhere. But I’m still 75% ‘risk-on’ in my portfolio currently. Just not too much US market risk – not 50%, let alone 70%-plus.
I’m even still exposed to tech stocks. Mostly through my own stock-picking though. And I’m very (very) underweight the Magnificent Seven. But I’m sure I’ll take a tumble anyway if the US market falls.
It usually pays to be humble as an investor. Lifelong passive investors who believe they can spot a bubble better than the market might want to ponder that. (Active investors should think about it every day!)
Meanwhile my co-blogger will wade further into these waters with his next Mavens member post, which is due on Tuesday.
Attention UK investors! Remember our massive broker comparison table? Well, we’ve rolled up our sleeves and updated it again to help you find the best online broker for you.
Picking up autumn leaves with chopsticks would have been less tedious. But it would not have produced a quick and easy overview of all the main execution-only investment services.
Investment platforms, stock brokers, call ’em what you will… we’ve stripped ’em down to their undies for you to eyeball over a cup of tea and your favourite tranquillisers.
iWeb transforms into Scottish Widows Share Dealing on 18 October and has cut its regular investing fee to zero. There’s no platform fee either so it’s excellent value if you don’t need to trade at the drop of a hat.
Freetrade has also slashed its ISA charge to zero, so is well worth a look too.
Who’s the best broker?
It’s impossible to say. There are too many subtle differences in the offers. The UK’s brokers occupy more niches than the mammal family. And while I know which one is best for me, I can’t know which one is right for you.
What we have done is laser focus the comparison onto the most important factor in play: cost.
An execution-only broker is not on this Earth to hold anyone’s hand.
Yes, we want their websites to work. We’d prefer them to not screw us over, go bust, or send us to the seventh circle of call centre hell. These things we take for granted.
So customer service metrics are not included in this table. It’s purely a bare-knuckle contest of brute cost for services rendered.
On that basis we’ve updated our ‘Good for’ column as below.
Disclosure: Links to platforms may be affiliate links, where we may earn a commission. This article is not personal financial advice. When investing, your capital is at risk and you may get back less than invested. With commission-free brokers other fees may apply. See terms and fees. Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results.
These are commission-free brokers. It’s always worth looking at a commission-free broker’s ‘How we make money’ page because – rest assured – they will be earning a buck, one way or another.
Just search that topic on their websites.
If commission-free brokers make you feel queasy then stay under the FSCS £85,000 investor compensation limit or use a broker that charges fees directly. You’ll find some very competitive offers in our table.
Beginners who prefer direct fees
Scottish Widows for ETFs and funds. (Alternatively: Trinity Bridge, Fidelity, plus Lloyds for SIPPs)
Established investors with portfolios worth £85,000+ who prefer to pay direct fees
The best choice for you depends on how often you trade, the value of your accounts, plus your personal priorities around customer service, family accounts, flexible ISAs, multi-currency accounts and so on.
Our ‘Good for’ choices are purely cost-based. We assume 12 buy and four sell trades per year. Buy trades use a broker’s regular investing scheme when available.
Using the full table
We divide the major UK brokers into four camps:
Flat-fee brokers – these charge one price for platform services, regardless of the size of your assets. In other words, they might charge you £100 per year, whether your portfolio is worth £1,000 or £1 million. Generally, if you’ve got a large portfolio then you definitely want to look here. Bear in mind that fixed fee doesn’t mean you won’t also be tapped up for dealing monies and a laundry list of other charges.
Percentage-fee brokers – this is where the wealthy need to be careful. These guys charge a percentage of your assets, say 0.3% per year. For a portfolio of £1,000 this would amount to a fee of £3 – but on £1 million you’d be paying £3,000. Small investors should generally use percentage-fee brokers. However even surprisingly moderate rollers are better off with fixed fees. Many percentage-fee brokers offer fee caps and tiered charges to limit the damage.
Commission-free brokers – these fresh upstarts apparently don’t charge you at all. Their marketing departments have it easy, simply pointing to £0 account charges and trading fees costing diddly squat. So why don’t these firms go bankrupt? Because they make up the difference using other methods. Revenue streams can include higher spreads, no interest on cash, and cross-selling more profitable services.
Trading platforms – brokerages that suit active investors who want to deal mostly in shares and more exotic securities besides. Think of noob-unfriendly sites like Interactive Brokers, Degiro, and friends.
Our table looks complex. But choosing the right broker needn’t be any more painful than checking it offers the investments you want and running a few numbers on your portfolio.
Help us find the best online broker for all of you
Our table’s ongoing vitality relies on crowd-sourcing.
We review the whole thing roughly every three months. But it can be kept permanently up-to-date if you contact us or leave a comment every time you find an inaccuracy, fresh information, or a platform you think should be added.
Thanks to your efforts as much as ours, our broker comparison table has become an invaluable resource for UK investors looking to find the best online broker.
Working at the end of the age of publishing words has given me a lead on the post-LLM era.
I saw early on how ChatGPT had mined the web for everything ever written – well-enough to spit out answers about anything. And as a writer I had more incentive than most to panic.
It was also clear that Google search would be in trouble – and with it the pipes that had kept independent publishing alive on the web for decades.
My worries soon came to pass. People increasingly now get their knowledge direct from chatbots – whether Google or others. Those who wrote the articles the bots were trained on are withering on the vine.
Another thing I’ve wondered about is when AI spam will overwhelm the Monevator comments. Already on platforms like X, swathes of comments are written by robots.
We have protections in place. But I don’t know how long they will be practical when facing spam like this:
Such spam started appearing in the past month or so. It addresses me or my co-blogger accurately. It references the article.
Only the booby-trap at the end confirms its ill-intentions.
Check mate
You may say there’s something sloppy about this text. (Not to mention that it reads like @TA’s mum had a hand in it…)
Agreed, but remember you’re only have to sanity check one comment here.
I have to parse several hundred spam comments every day as a double-check. Both on spam that gets through our filters or is held for moderation, and also real comments that are incorrectly marked as spam. This is after software has already flagged the obvious offenders.
It’s burdensome, and the reason why I had to close comments on posts over three years old. To keep it vaguely manageable.
Spam comments like the one above stand out because they are still rare. But I imagine they will soon be the norm. (Well, presuming the economics of spamming still works if spammers are somehow paying for AI compute?)
I also expect bots to get clever enough to hide their intentions by posing as real readers, before finally inserting their spam links once they’re trusted.
Incidentally, we can see that’s a spammy link in my example. But if a reader posts a URL to data elsewhere about interest rates, say, it’s not so easy for software.
That’s why comments with links are already often held in moderation, especially from new commenters.
King sacrifice
Long story short: one day only logged-in Monevatormembers may be able to post comments. (I’m presuming the spammers won’t pay for the privilege!)
I’d be happy for commenting to be another perk for those who kindly support our efforts. It would make general moderation far easier, too.
Really, everyone who comments regularly on Monevator should already become a member. It costs much less than a High Street coffee a month. Even cheaper with annual membership!
With member-only commenting I know we’d lose some good comments, sadly. Although on the flip-side I suspect most discussions would be even more civil than we’re lucky enough to enjoy today.
The real downside would be fencing out non-regulars who bring one-off insights to a discussion. For example, a professional bond trader who arrives here via Google and educates us with a comment on an article about long-dated gilts.
That sort of thing is very valuable. I’m loathe to lose it. So for now the battle against spam continues!