Skip to main content
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • Wealth management
  • Asset management
  • MyRathbones login
  • Financial Planning login
  • Donor Advised Fund login
Home
  • Who we help
    Who we help

    We help a wide range of clients invest well so that they can focus on what matters

    Who we help
    • Individuals and families

      Focusing on you and your individual goals

    • Business owners and entrepreneurs

      Helping turn the success of your business into financial security for your family

    • Financial advisers

      Working with you, for your clients.

    • Charities

      Helping charities invest in line with their mission and values

    • Professional partners

      We work with lawyers, accountants and other professionals.

  • Our services
    Services

    See our wide range of services tailored for your needs

    Our services
    • Investment management

      Looking for someone to create an investment portfolio for you?

    • Wealth management

      Our combined investment and planning service for a holistic approach to your finances

    • Financial planning

      Need help reorganising your finances and planning for the future?

    • Asset Management

      Looking to invest in a fund? See our full range

    • Tax and trust

      Helping you pass on your wealth, manage a trust or gift to charity

    • Greenbank sustainable investing

      Looking for investments that align with your values? See our sustainable investment options

  • About us
    About us

    A top 3 UK wealth manager with roots dating back to 1742

    About us
    • Careers

      Learn more about what it’s like to work at Rathbones, and search our current vacancies

    • Corporate governance

      Explore our reports and accounts which ensure we comply with the UK Corporate Governance Code

    • Investor relations

      Find the Rathbones plc financials, investment case and key events

    • Media centre

      Read the latest Group news

    • Our purpose

      Our driving purpose is to help more people invest well, so they can live well

    • Responsible business

      We believe in doing the right thing for our clients and for others too

  • Insights
    Insights

    Read the latest news and market commentary from our specialists

    Insights
    • Financial planning

      Explore a range of topics effecting your finances, from retirement planning to the latest legislative changes

    • Investing

      Read about the key investment themes effecting global markets

    • Podcasts

      Listen to our specialists in one of our podcasts: Inspired sounds, Inspired minds, or Financial planning unlocked

    • Responsible investing

      Explore our articles, reports and events on Responsible Investment

  • Contacts
    Contacts

    Whether you have a question about our services, or need to talk someone specific, we can help

    Contacts
    • Our offices

      Find your local Rathbones office. We have 21 across the UK and Channel Islands.

    • Our people

      Find the contact details for your Rathbones team by searching our people’s directory.

    • Let's talk

      Our team will be in touch to help you book a no obligation consultation with an adviser.

    • Other contacts

      Need to contact us about something else? Here you'll find all the options

Let's talk

Search

Winner takes all

3 June 2019

Our asset allocation strategy team considers whether the field of outperforming stocks is narrowing, and comes to an unexpected conclusion worth considering when advising your clients on investments.

Edward Smith, Head of Asset Allocation Research
Jing Hu, Asset Allocation Analyst

Are the biggest companies eating everyone else’s lunch? Does biggest now mean best? If so, what are the implications for your clients’ investments? If they don’t pick the winners, are they at greater risk of a relative loss than ever before?

We keep hearing these questions, or variations of them, on a theme we’re calling “winner takes all”. The rise of the FAANGs most likely prompted them – they went quiet during the marked underperformance of the FAANGs in the fourth quarter of last year, but these tech giants have since rallied.

Let’s start with earnings. To provide a level playing field, we looked at operating income. Are the largest earners increasing their share of total earnings? That’s one way of describing a winner-takes-all scenario. At least in the US – home of the FAANGs – that doesn’t appear to be the case.

To identify the ‘largest earners’ we ranked S&P 500 stocks by earnings within each sector, then took the top fifth from each sector to create a basket of the largest earners. This group accounts for around two-thirds of total earnings. That’s a lot, but their share hasn’t changed much over the last 30 years. If anything, it’s been falling over the last few years.

Doing a similar exercise based on last year’s largest earners produces a very similar result. This tells us that there isn’t much turnover in the largest earners basket: earnings are persistent. The largest earners don’t appear to be growing in dominance.

We also looked at the earnings share of the largest 25 companies as a whole, rather than the largest companies from each sector. Again, our findings are very similar – a slightly declining share. Still, these results so far don’t rule out the possibility that the gains are becoming increasingly concentrated.

So, we move on from looking at the largest earners and instead consider companies growing earnings the most – in absolute (dollar), not percentage terms. Are those companies growing their earnings the most accounting for a growing proportion of total earnings growth? Again our analysis suggests not – the companies with the largest dollar earnings growth each year have always dominated total earnings growth. And we also found that companies with the largest growth in one year are no more likely to deliver the largest growth in the next.

To test how stock prices have been responding to earnings size and absolute earnings growth, we simulated ‘buying’ a basket of top quintile sector earners each month, and ‘selling’ the basket of bottom quintiles, using annual earnings growth that was available at the time (to avoid ‘information from the future’ creeping in). This exercise didn’t produce any excess returns compared to investing in the (ex post) largest earners or largest growers.                     

Investing in the ex ante largest growers (ie. investing with perfect foresight) would have delivered absolutely spectacular returns. Almost as spectacular as investing with perfect foresight in the companies delivering the highest percentage growth. This surprised us, as investors invariably concentrate on the percentage change in earnings, not the absolute change in dollar terms. But perhaps this is making life unnecessarily hard for the stock picker? The rank order of absolute earnings growth should be easier for investors to predict than the rank order of percentage earnings growth (the smallest companies are less likely to make it into the largest earners category). That’s something to think about.

                                               

 

Let's Talk

Ready to start a conversation? Please complete our enquiry form, we look forward to speaking with you

Enquire
Rathbones Logo
  • Important Information
    • Modern Slavery Statement
    • Important Information
    • Complaints
    • Privacy
    • Accessibility
    • Climate reporting
    • Cookies
    • Update cookie preferences
    • Sitemap
  • Important information 2
    • Financial Services Compensation Scheme
    • Banking services
    • Consumer duty manufacturer request for information
    • Financial Ombudsman Service
    • Interest Rates
    • Keeping you safe
    • ScamSmart
    • Status of our websites
Address

Rathbones Group Plc
30 Gresham Street
London
EC2V 7QN

© 2025 Rathbones Group Plc
Incorporated and registered in England and Wales.
Registered number 01000403

Follow us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • X
  • Youtube

The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.