Although US markets struggled to make headway in December, that did not derail what turned out to be a good year for equity markets, gold and industrial metals.
A significant theme of 2025 was that those markets that started the year at the lowest price, as measured by price/earnings (PE) ratios, delivered the best returns over the year; the more expensive markets lagged. For all the talk of the Magnificent Seven, just two – Alphabet (US:GOOGL), up 65 per cent, and Nvidia (US:NVDA), up 38.9 per cent – beat the 17.9 per cent total return from the S&P 500.
In terms of equity market returns in December and over the year, Europe led the way. The Italian MIB was up 3.3 per cent in December, making a 45.3 per cent gain for the year, while the German Dax was up 2.7 per cent (23 per cent for 2025), the FTSE All-Share (TR) was up 2.2 per cent (24 per cent for the year) and the French CAC was up 0.3 per cent (14.3 per cent for 2025).
Behind that came the Nikkei 225, up only 0.2 per cent in December but 26.1 per cent for the year. The S&P 500’s return was -0.1 per cent in December. Its 2025 return of 17.9 per cent was mid-table at best. For a sterling-based investor, the US dollar’s depreciation against the pound reduced the return by some 7.5 percentage points. The Nasdaq Composite was down 0.5 per cent in December but up 20.4 per cent (in US dollar terms) for the year. Other notable gainers in 2025 were the Hang Seng, up 27.8 per cent, and the FTSE China 50, up 25.6 per cent.
Copper had a robust end to the year with December’s return of 7.7 per cent, making 36.4 per cent for the year. I was a little early on my copper call, but it is now coming through powerfully. The markets are starting to appreciate that as the world electrifies, supply is not nearly sufficient to meet demand. Aluminium was up 18 per cent, zinc 6.7 per cent and nickel 6.3 per cent over the year.
Read more from Investors’ Chronicle
The US 10-year Treasury yield ended 2025 at 4.17 per cent, down from the previous year’s 4.58 per cent. The drop reflected the progress on bringing down inflation, especially towards the end of the year. Sadly, it was not the same story in the UK, where the 10-year gilt yield fell from 4.57 per cent to 4.48 per cent. The UK continues to suffer from the so-called ‘moron premium’, where the markets demand that the UK pays more to borrow money due to self-inflicted anti-growth policies. In Germany, the 10-year bund yields only 2.86 per cent.
The FTSE All-Share’s return of 24 per cent masked a more worrying underlying problem: while the internationally exposed FTSE 100 (TR) was up 25.8 per cent, the more UK-reliant FTSE 250 rose only 13 per cent. Even worse were the FTSE Small Cap’s 6.7 per cent and FTSE Aim’s 6.4 per cent efforts. Will 2026 prove a better year for mid- and small-cap stocks? Only if the economic news beats what are admittedly low expectations.
The standout winner of 2025 was gold. Following 2024’s gain of 28.4 per cent for sterling investors, last year saw another 70 per cent. In US dollars, gold gained 64.8 per cent to end the year at $4,325 (£3,225) an ounce. Bitcoin, on the other hand, disappointed its fans – in dollar terms, it was down 6.4 per cent over the year to $87,495.
Oil was also weak, with Brent crude down 18 per cent to $61 per barrel. Although demand has held up, supply was plentiful. The Saudis lost patience with Opec members producing in excess of their quotas and turned on the spigots. In the short term, the price should settle around current levels or weaken further. However, with peak oil demand being pushed further out, there must be a risk that the balance between supply and demand will tighten at some stage. The saying that the cure to high oil prices is high oil prices works both ways.
JIC Portfolio performance
In December, the JIC Portfolio was up 1 per cent (compared with 2.2 per cent for the FTSE All-Share). For 2025 as a whole, the portfolio was up 21.9 per cent – just behind the FTSE All-Share’s 24 per cent gain. This was down to too many mid and small caps, and not enough large.
Since its inception in January 2012, the JIC Portfolio has delivered a cumulative return of 437 per cent, equivalent to an annualised return of 12.8 per cent. By contrast, the FTSE All-Share (TR) Index is up 210 per cent, with an annualised return of 8.4 per cent. Over five years, the JIC Portfolio has risen 31.3 per cent, some way behind the 73.8 per cent for the index. That’s what happens when a good year drops out, to be replaced by an average year. Additionally, it does not help to be overexposed to UK small- and mid-cap stocks. The good news is that 2021 was a poor year for the JIC Portfolio, so if I can have a half-decent year in 2026, the five-year numbers will get back on track.
During the portfolio’s first 13 years (to December 2024), the annualised return had slipped to 12.1 per cent, so it’s good to see it back up towards 13 per cent now.
December’s biggest risers
-
IG Group (IGG): Up 15.9 per cent, on relief that there was no punitive change to relevant gambling taxation in the Budget. It continues to use its prolific cash flow to buy back shares and pays an attractive dividend. The current yield is 3.5 per cent. I expect further progress in 2026.
-
Lundin Mining (CA:LUN): Up 13 per cent, helped by the rising copper price.
-
DLocal (US:DLO): 5.2 per cent higher. Q3 revenue was ahead of expectations.
December’s biggest fallers
-
Coinbase Global (US:COIN): -17.1 per cent. Bitcoin and other crypto volatility hurt.
-
EssilorLuxottica (FR:ELP): -12.6 per cent. It gave up the gains of the previous month.
-
Me Group (MEGP): -7.4 per cent. Disappointment at the end of takeover talks.
-
Frontline (US:FRO): -7.3 per cent. Profit-taking after a good November.
-
Fireweed Metals (CA:FWZ): -6.9 per cent. Profit-taking after a good October/November.
Full-year highlights
The top performers over the full year were:
-
L&G Gold Mining ETF (AUCP): +162 per cent.
-
Lundin Mining: +140 per cent.
-
Fireweed Metals: +93.6 per cent.
-
NGEx Minerals (CA:NGEX): +90.9 per cent.
-
International Petroleum (IPCO): +47.7 per cent.
-
Serica Energy (SQZ): +41.1 per cent.
-
IG Group: +37.5 per cent.
Take a bow, Lundin Group companies. They benefited from robust copper and gold prices and have grown to substantial positions in my portfolio. So far, I have resisted selling (run your winners). The backdrop is in place for another decent year, and I have expectations of good newsflow from these companies over the coming months.
International Petroleum did not, of course, benefit from rising commodity prices. Crude was down. That did not stop the share price rising 47.7 per cent as the company continued to use cash flow to buy back 7 per cent of its outstanding equity per annum. Given that the Lundin family owns around 30 per cent, that equates to buying back 10 per cent of the free float. With its Blackrod 1 development due to come on stream in the third quarter of this year (ahead of schedule), cash flow will receive a significant boost as production should increase by around 70 per cent.
To the NGEx performance, one should add the 1 per cent value added to the portfolio in December from the listing of LunR Royalties Corporation (CA:LUNR). It was a spinout from NGEx based on one share for every four held in the latter. I’m expecting Lundin Royalty to add significant extra value in the years ahead as it signs royalty agreements. Given the importance of having a name like the Lundins behind you, I envisage it signing deals on attractive terms.
The two notable underperformers were, firstly, Bloomsbury (BMY), which fell 26 per cent. It underwent a significant drop in valuation, from around 15.5 times February 2026 forecast earnings per share to 11.7 times. Me Group fell 26.3 per cent. It saw a similar devaluation from around 13.5 to 9.9 times October 2025 earnings forecasts. Trading updates/results from these two in the coming weeks will be important.
The ‘idiot trades’ included selling Sylvania Platinum (SLP) on 4 December 2024 at 42.9p. It ended 2025 at 102.5p. The other was to sell Zegona (ZEG), admittedly for a 60 per cent profit, in May at 640p. It ended 2025 at 1,395p.
Funds Portfolio performance
The Funds Portfolio was up 1.6 per cent in December (compared with -0.4 per cent for the FTSE All-World GBP Total Return Index), leaving it up 30 per cent for 2025. This return was nicely ahead of the All-World Index’s sterling return of 14.5 per cent.
The significant performers over the year were:
-
L&G Gold Mining ETF: +162 per cent.
-
BlackRock World Mining Trust (BRWM): +71.9 per cent.
-
Temple Bar Investment Trust (TMPL): +44.4 per cent.
-
Argonaut Flexible Fund (GB00BTCLCP27): +36.9 per cent.
-
Ranmore Global Equity (IE000WSZ17Z4): +29 per cent.
-
Asoka India Equity Investment Trust (AIE): The sole annual loser, down 9.2 per cent.
Portfolio activity in December
It was a tranquil month on the trading front: just one transaction in each portfolio. I sold Xtrackers AI & Big Data ETF (XAIX) from both portfolios, in each case recording a small profit. The risk/reward trade-off was not sufficient given the high valuations of the big AI tech stocks. Any disappointment could lead to significant setbacks in the share prices. In any case, I was happy to start 2026 with a little more cash in each portfolio.
Lessons
Same old, same old: must be a better seller. The performance of Bloomsbury and Me Group was disappointing, and the share price charts should have alerted me to sell earlier. It’s always easy with hindsight, but getting the balance right between being unemotional and persuading oneself of the value in a stock is key. True, it can lead to selling stocks that then bounce, such as Sylvania Platinum – that is an opportunity lost. What is important is what one holds. Only those stocks can make you money or cause you damage.
Outlook
All the experts opining on what the year ahead holds can make fascinating reading, but it’s wise not to place too much weight on it. Predicting next week, let alone the following year, is challenging.
Despite last year’s better performance from the FTSE All-Share, the UK market still looks good value relative to other markets. I think larger internationally exposed stocks, as encapsulated in the FTSE 100, will make further healthy gains. Overseas buyers seem to be buying the UK even if domestic investors remain sceptical. The big question is whether this will spill over into mid- and small-cap stocks, which are more sensitive to the health of the UK economy. Will UK consumers who saved in 2025 in anticipation of difficult times ahead loosen the shackles? I see that the total held in cash Isas has risen to £440bn.
As for the US, it is one of President Trump’s stated policies to see a weaker US dollar. Let’s take him at his word. If he manages to push through more interest rate cuts than are perhaps warranted, that should help weaken the dollar and may store up inflation problems ahead. On top of that, he will be pump-priming spending with tax cuts ahead of the midterms. Again inflationary. Against that, AI could lead to substantial productivity gains and another year of robust GDP growth. Overall, I feel more comfortable with exposure to better-value markets.
| JIC Portfolio as at 31 December | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Name | Price at 31 December (p) | Avg price paid (p) | % of portfolio | % return so far |
| L&G Gold Mining ETF (GBP) | 8022.0 | 3199.0 | 10.7 | 150.8 |
| Lundin Mining C | 1598.5 | 749.4 | 8.7 | 116 |
| NGEx Minerals | 1387.2 | 621.9 | 8.4 | 123.1 |
| International Petroleum | 1345.5 | 1044.1 | 5.0 | 28.9 |
| Pollen Street Group | 942.0 | 706.9 | 4.9 | 43.4 |
| Polar Capital Holdings | 532.0 | 446.8 | 4.9 | 40.9 |
| IG Group | 1315.0 | 693.8 | 4.8 | 84.3 |
| Serica Energy | 174.8 | 200.2 | 4.7 | 181.8 |
| Kraneshares CSI China Internet ETF USD | 1927.5 | 1933.2 | 4.2 | -0.3 |
| Rosebank Industries | 350.0 | 338.5 | 4.1 | 3.4 |
| Ashoka India Equity IT | 272.0 | 248.5 | 4.1 | 9.7 |
| Bloomsbury Publishing | 482.0 | 452.8 | 3.9 | 29.4 |
| Me Group International | 151.0 | 141.4 | 3.8 | 43.9 |
| Invesco Utilities S&P US Select Sector ETF | 46120.0 | 48650.4 | 3.6 | -5.2 |
| EssilorLuxottica | 23574.0 | 22343.3 | 2.8 | 5.5 |
| 4imprint | 3845.0 | 3717.6 | 2.6 | 5 |
| Fireweed Metals | 146.8 | 92.6 | 2.5 | 58.6 |
| Frontline | 1621.9 | 1847.3 | 2.5 | -11.4 |
| XPS Pensions | 339.0 | 339.9 | 2.0 | 1.7 |
| DLocal | 1051.5 | 1140.9 | 1.8 | -7.8 |
| Coinbase Global | 16816.0 | 25798.9 | 1.3 | -34.8 |
| LunR Royalties | 707.0 | 663.4 | 1.1 | 6.6 |
| Cash | 7.6 |
Three reasons UK bonds are back in favour
Bonds, as well as equities, have started the year on the front foot