The Chronicle

World of opportunit­y

- ANTHONY KEANE

BUYING OVERSEAS STOCKS CAN BE REWARDING, BUT IT ALSO COMES WITH RISK

Sinking global stockmarke­ts are offering potential bargain buys to Australian­s now as technology makes it faster and cheaper than ever to become an internatio­nal investor.

At just 1.7 per cent of the global economy, Australia is small compared with the US, China, Japan and Germany, and investment specialist­s say it’s wise to diversify money offshore.

Your super fund already does this, with data from industry super group ASFA showing 27 per cent of Australian­s’ nest eggs are invested in global shares, and 24 per cent in Aussie shares.

Investors can go global by buying direct shares through full-service or online stockbroke­rs, online services such as Stockspot, eToro and Stake, managed funds and exchange traded funds (ETFs).

However, they should understand that internatio­nal shares increase investors’ financial rollercoas­ter ride, delivering new twists such as currency fluctuatio­ns and geopolitic­al impacts.

Financial strategist Theo Marinis says investing globally delivers greater diversific­ation, especially when you consider 40 per cent of Australia’s stockmarke­t is resource companies and banks.

“And if you just invest here, you have no exposure to Tesla, Alphabet (Google), Amazon and others,” he says.

Marinis suggests splitting share investment­s half-and-half between Australian and internatio­nal options.

“We use ETF index funds. They are the most cost-effective and hassle-free way to invest overseas,” he says.

ETFs have boomed in the past decade in Australia, and a new ETF report by online investment adviser Stockspot says a record $23 billion poured into them locally in the past year.

“However, ETFs still only make up around 4 per cent of the total funds market in Australia, compared to 25 per cent in the US,” it says. “We believe there’s a lot further to go.”

Stockspot’s report recommends investors focus on broad market index ETFs rather than sectorspec­ific and thematic ETFs, which “are launched when the hype is at its peak” then underperfo­rm.

ETF returns are boosted by their low costs, and Stockspot CEO Chris Brycki says there’s no need to pay high fees to profession­als “when you can own the index”.

“Don’t pay a fund manager 1-2 per cent per year or performanc­e fees to invest in global shares since 97.5 per cent do worse than the index,” he says.

“We don’t recommend investing in global shares unless you’re planning to invest for at least three years.

“Your investment horizon and capacity to take risk will determine how much to invest globally. For Stockspot clients we recommend between 20-30 per cent of their portfolio.”

Shaw and Partners senior investment adviser Jed Richards says in previous decades it was difficult and expensive to invest globally amid high transactio­n costs and complex paperwork.

“We reserved it for our largest clients, but technology has moved extremely quickly in the last few years,” he says.

“Nowadays you can buy internatio­nal shares for 0.15 per cent or less.”

Richards says his clients invest directly into global giants including Microsoft, Disney, Nike and Constellat­ion Brands, which produces Corona beer, and he also uses ETFs.

His key message to global investors is: “look at the companies themselves rather than the individual share prices”.

“We know Microsoft will be a larger company in five years, because more people are using it. Buy a company for its performanc­e, not the current share price level.”

Investor Erik Kasearu has focused heavily on ETFs – including internatio­nal funds – since 2021 and is happy to ride the risk.

“I had none at all before. If I had bought Tesla shares 10 years ago, imagine that now,” he says.

“I would be driving a Tesla.” Shares in the electric car giant have jumped from $US6 to $US696 in the past decade but, highlighti­ng their volatility, are down from $US1145 in January.

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