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Here's what $10,000 invested in ASX tech shares 5 years ago would be worth now

The Motley Fool·07/13/2026 22:45:51
語音播報

ASX tech shares spent the early 2020s being described as the future of the local share market.

The scoreboard tells a different story.

The Betashares S&P/ASX Australian Technology ETF (ASX: ATEC), which tracks the S&P/ASX All Technology Index (ASX: XTX), traded at $22.37 five years ago.

Today it trades at approximately $22.69.

A $10,000 investment five years ago would have bought approximately 447 units.

Those 447 units are worth approximately $10,143 today.

That is a capital gain of roughly 1.4% over five full years, before distributions.

Distributions would add modestly to that figure, but the headline is unavoidable: on price alone, ASX tech investors have gone almost nowhere.

How ASX tech shares went nowhere so dramatically

The flat five-year result conceals extraordinary volatility.

ATEC returned 3.89% in 2021, then crashed 32.43% in 2022 as interest rates rose and growth valuations compressed violently.

It then recovered hard, gaining 34.91% in 2023 and 42.27% in 2024, before falling 10.60% in 2025 and dropping a further 12% so far in 2026.

The ETF now sits approximately 30% below its twelve-month high of $33.29.

Investors who bought and sold at the right moments in that cycle did extremely well.

Investors who simply held for five years captured none of it.

Here are some ASX tech shares that have defined the performance of this ETF over the last 5 years.

Xero a great business, a terrible entry price

Xero Ltd (ASX: XRO) is one of ATEC's largest holdings at approximately 9% of the fund.

Xero has fallen approximately 60% from its all-time high of $196.52.

The business itself has not deteriorated.

The FY2026 result delivered 31% revenue growth to $2.75 billion, with the US business surging 240% on the back of the Melio acquisition.

The decline is almost entirely a valuation story. At its peak, Xero traded at well over 100 times earnings. This multiple assumed years of uninterrupted growth and left no margin for the rate environment to change.

WiseTech Global: the index's biggest destroyer of value

WiseTech Global Ltd (ASX: WTC) sits at approximately 5.7% of ATEC.

WiseTech was the worst performer in the entire ASX 200 in FY26, dropping 70% in value.

Unlike Xero, WiseTech's collapse was not primarily about valuation.

It was about governance, driven by a series of allegations against founder Richard White, including an AFP investigation.

However, the CargoWise platform remains used by 23 of the world's top 25 global freight forwarders, and WiseTech has maintained its FY26 guidance throughout the turmoil.

The business did not break, rather, investor trust did.

What this actually teaches investors

The lesson here is not "avoid technology."

It is that entry valuation determines outcomes, and that concentration inside a narrow sector index can be punishing.

ATEC's top ten holdings account for approximately 75% of the fund.

When two of the largest fall 60% and 70% respectively, nothing in the remaining holdings can offset that.

Over the same five-year window, an investor in a broader ASX 200 index fund would have collected years of dividends and franking credits while the tech index went sideways.

Foolish takeaway for ASX tech shares

$10,000 invested in ASX tech shares five years ago is worth approximately $10,143 today on a capital basis.

The businesses inside that index include some of the finest companies in Australia.

The prices investors paid for them in 2021 were the problem, not the businesses themselves.

For investors looking at today's heavily discounted tech sector, that fact is worth considering.

The post Here's what $10,000 invested in ASX tech shares 5 years ago would be worth now appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended WiseTech Global and Xero. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended WiseTech Global and Xero. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

The Motley Fool's purpose is to help the world invest, better. Click here now for your free subscription to Take Stock, The Motley Fool's free investing newsletter. Packed with stock ideas and investing advice, it is essential reading for anyone looking to build and grow their wealth in the years ahead. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Bruce Jackson. 2026