
Look at the S&P/ASX 200 (ASX: XJO) today, and it appears reassuringly familiar.
Banks and miners still dominate.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (ASX: CBA), BHP Group Ltd (ASX: BHP), and CSL Ltd (ASX: CSL) still sit near the top of the index, exactly as they did a decade ago.
Yet almost every force that actually drives those companies has inverted since 2016.
That contrast is worth exploring further
The ASX 200 index has climbed, but not spectacularly
In mid-2016 the ASX 200 sat around 5,200 points.
Today it trades near 8,800.
That is a capital gain of roughly 69% over ten years, or approximately 5.4% per annum before dividends.
Including dividends and franking credits, the total return has been meaningfully better.
Since inception, the index has returned approximately 8.53% per annum including dividends, compared to 4.17% excluding them.
The interest rate environment has completely reversed
This is the biggest change, and it explains most of the others.
In 2016 the RBA was cutting.
The cash rate sat at 1.75% in July that year before falling to 1.50%, a record low at the time.
Money was cheap, and investors were being pushed out of cash and into shares in search of any yield at all.
Today the RBA has hiked three times in 2026 alone, taking the cash rate to 4.35%, its highest level since 2011.
Furthermore, Governor Michele Bullock told reporters after the June decision:
Today’s decision does not rule out further tightening in monetary policy if that is what is required to bring inflation down.
A decade ago, low rates inflated the valuations of anything with growth attached to it.
Today, high rates are systematically deflating them.
The commodities that move the market have changed
In 2016 the market’s obsession was Chinese steel demand and the iron ore price, which had collapsed from above US$100 per tonne to below US$50.
BHP had just slashed its dividend by nearly 75%, cutting it from US62 cents per share to US16 cents and abandoning its progressive dividend policy.
The mood around the miners was bleak.
Today the story is completely different.
For the first time in BHP’s 136-year history, copper earnings exceeded iron ore contributions in the first half of FY26. This is driven by AI data centre construction, electric vehicles, and grid infrastructure investment.
Moreover, BHP plans to grow copper-equivalent production at 3% to 4% per year through 2035.
The commodity cycle did not necessarily recover, but rather it was replaced by a different one.
Entire sectors did not exist
Perhaps the most striking change is what was absent in 2016.
The S&P/ASX All Technology Index (ASX: XTX) did not launch until February 2020.
Artificial intelligence did not exist as an investable theme in any form. Lithium was a curiosity rather than an industry. Lastly, data centres were basic infrastructure, not a growth story.
Every one of those has since become a defining feature of the market, and in several cases a source of both enormous gains and brutal losses.
What has not changed for the ASX 200
Financials and materials remain the two largest sectors on the ASX, exactly as they were in 2016.
The big four banks still anchor the index.
Australia is still, fundamentally, a market of banks and miners with a healthcare giant attached.
For all the disruption of the past decade, the structural shape of the ASX has proven remarkably durable.
Foolish takeaway
The lesson from ten years of ASX 200 history is not that everything changes.
It is that the drivers change while the names stay the same.
An investor who bought BHP in 2016 was buying an iron ore business in a rate-cutting world. An investor buying BHP today is buying a copper business in a rate-hiking world.
Same ticker, but an entirely different investment.
The post What did the market look like 10 years ago? Here’s what’s changed for the ASX 200 appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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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 CSL. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended BHP Group and CSL. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.