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    Home»Stock Market»UK vs US shares: The five most popular stocks – and how the markets compare
    Stock Market

    UK vs US shares: The five most popular stocks – and how the markets compare

    January 30, 20256 Mins Read


    British investors have been increasingly turning their attention to the other side of the Atlantic and investing in US stocks in recent years.

    With the US stock market putting in a stint of stellar performance, led by the so-called Magnificent Seven group of household name technology giants, that’s hardly surprising.

    But if you dig deeper, how does the US stock market stack up against its UK counterpart and how does their recent performance compare?

    With the help of investment platform Trading 212, we reveal its investors’ top five most bought stocks from the US and UK and take a look at both markets.

    Nvidia has rocketed over recent years to become the second biggest US listed company

    Nvidia has rocketed over recent years to become the second biggest US listed company

    Top US stocks 

    Trading 212 investors’ five most bought US stocks are:

    Nvidia

    Tesla

    Apple

    Microsoft

    Amazon

    Top UK stocks 

    Trading 212 investors’ five most bought UK stocks are:

    BP

    Rolls-Royce

    Legal & General Group

    Lloyds Banking Group

    National Grid

    The US vs the UK stock market

    The US stock market

    The flagship of the US market is the S&P 500 index. This index of large companies has delivered two knock-out years on the bounce, with 2023’s 32 per cent total return followed by 2024’s 22 per cent return.

    The S&P 500, was created in 1957 and includes 500 of America’s leading listed companies by size, covering about 80 per cent of the available US stock market capitalisation.

    It is market cap weighted, which means the proportion of the index that a firm makes up relates to its overall size: the bigger a company’s overall value, the larger its slice of the index is.

    Apple is currently the S&P 500's largest company by market cap

    Apple is currently the S&P 500’s largest company by market cap

    The last major decline for the S&P 500 was seen in 2022, when in share price terms it dropped 15 per cent, although that followed a powerful 2021, when it leapt 31.5 per cent in the pandemic rebound.

    Dividends make up only a relatively small portion of returns from the S&P 500, with the current yield just 1.24 per cent.

    Over five years, the S&P 500 is up 84 per cent in share price terms. This robust growth has pushed the US market to an even greater proportion of the global stock market, making up about 74 per cent of the MSCI All World index.

    The Magnificent Seven dominate the market, with Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Tesla and Alphabet’s two share classes, joined only by Broadcom and Berkshire Hathaway in the top ten constituents.

    This top ten accounts for 37 per cent of the whole S&P 500 index and the similarity of the companies in it, has led to concerns over concentration risk.

    Information technology is the biggest sector in the S&P 500 at 32.5 per cent, followed by financials at 13.6 per cent and consumer discretionary at 11.3 per cent.

    The other major US markets are the more limited Dow Jones Industrial Average, an index of 30 selected large US companies and the tech-heavy Nasdaq index of 3,500 companies.

    > Trading 212: Open an Isa and get a free fractional share 

    The UK stock market

    The main UK stock market is covered by the FTSE All Share index, although the leading index of the hundred biggest companies, the FTSE 100, garners most of the headlines.

    The FTSE All-Share covers brings together the FTSE 100 index, the mid-cap FTSE 250 market index and the FTSE Small Cap index, which account for 98 per cent of the UK stock market. 

    It does not include London’s AIM market of small and micro-cap shares.

    Dating back to 1962, when it was called the FT Actuaries All-Share Index, the FTSE All-Share is a market cap weighted index. The FTSE 100 and FTSE 250, were created in 1984 and 1992, respectively, to allow for tracking large cap and mid-cap stocks.

    BP ended 2024 as the FTSE All-Share's sixth largest company by market capitalisation

    BP ended 2024 as the FTSE All-Share’s sixth largest company by market capitalisation

    The FTSE All-Share had a good 2024, with a 9.5 per cent total return. This followed another decent year in 2023, with a total return of 7.9 per cent. The UK market also narrowly avoided losses in 2022, when it was the best performing major global market with a 0.3 per cent total return.

    A larger chunk of the FTSE All-Share’s returns are driven by dividends than the S&P 500’s, thanks to the UK market’s 3.59 per cent yield.

    However, as with many major markets, the FTSE All-Share has been put in the shade by the S&P 500’s barnstorming returns. Over the five years to the end of 2024, the FTSE All-Share was up just 6.5 per cent in share price terms but delivered a total return of 27 per cent.

    The ten largest stocks in the FTSE All-Share make up 38.9 per cent of the index but could be considered more diverse than the S&P 500’s top ten. 

    They are: Astrazeneca, Shell, HSBC, Unilever, RELX, BP, British American Tobacco, Diageo, London Stock Exchange Group, and GSK.

    The biggest sector in the FTSE All-Share is financials, at 26.5 per cent, followed by consumer staples, at 14.8 per cent, and industrials at 11.9 per cent. Technology makes up just 1.4 per cent of the index.

    Fee-free investing with Trading 212 

    A message from the article sponsor: Trading 212’s mission is to democratise the markets and provide free and innovative tools that help people build wealth every day.

    Trading 212 offers investors a stocks and shares Isa with no account holding fee and no charge to buy or sell stocks.

    This is Money readers who open a Trading 212 Isa can also benefit from a special deal where they will receive a free fractional share worth up to £100.

    > Trading 212: Open an Isa and get a free fractional share 

    When investing, your capital is at risk and you may get back less than invested. Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results. Other fees may apply. See terms and fees. Tax treatment depends on your individual circumstances and regulations which may change. This information is not investment advice. Do your own research.

    Some links in this article may be affiliate links. If you click on them we may earn a small commission. That helps us fund This Is Money, and keep it free to use. We do not write articles to promote products. We do not allow any commercial relationship to affect our editorial independence.



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