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Magic Formula Investing in Australia 2026: Is Greenblatt’s Strategy Still Relevant?

Curious to see how Magic Formula Investing could reshape your ASX portfolio? Run your own screen or compare value focused ETFs to see if this time tested strategy deserves a place in your 2026 investment toolkit.

Stock picking is often painted as a high-stakes guessing game, but what if there was a formula to help you stack the odds in your favour? Enter Magic Formula Investing, the brainchild of US hedge fund manager Joel Greenblatt. The promise: a systematic, rules-based approach to finding undervalued, high-quality companies—no Wall Street wizardry required.

But here’s the million-dollar question for 2026: Can this American-born strategy really help Australian investors outperform the market? Let’s dig into how Magic Formula Investing works, how it fares on the ASX, and whether it’s a smart move in today’s regulatory and economic environment.

What Is Magic Formula Investing?

Developed in the mid-2000s, Joel Greenblatt’s Magic Formula uses just two key metrics to rank stocks:

The process is simple: screen for companies above a minimum market cap (often $100 million), exclude financials and utilities, rank the rest by the two metrics, then buy the top 20–30 stocks and rebalance annually.

Greenblatt’s research, and his book The Little Book That Beats the Market, showed impressive back-tested results in the US. But, as always, past performance is no guarantee—especially outside Wall Street.

How Does Magic Formula Investing Fit the Australian Market?

Australia’s sharemarket has its own quirks—think resource giants, a heavy financial sector, and fewer mega-cap tech stocks. Here’s how the Magic Formula adapts to the local landscape in 2026:

In recent years, several Australian ETFs and managed funds have launched ‘quantitative value’ or ‘quality’ strategies inspired by Greenblatt’s method, though few follow it to the letter.

Performance and Pitfalls: The 2026 Reality Check

So, how has the Magic Formula fared in Australia? Over the past decade, local backtests (by independent researchers and some robo-advisers) suggest the strategy has delivered outperformance in some periods—especially when value stocks are in favour. But it isn’t magic:

Example: An investor who used Magic Formula screens in 2022, buying a basket of 25 ASX mid-caps, saw an average total return of 9% p.a. through to 2026—outperforming the ASX 200 index, but with higher drawdowns during tech rallies.

Should You Try the Magic Formula in 2026?

Magic Formula Investing is not a silver bullet, but it’s far from snake oil. For disciplined investors who can stomach volatility and stick to the rules, it can be a powerful way to avoid emotional mistakes and focus on company fundamentals. Still, it requires:

For those wanting a hands-off approach, several ASX-listed value ETFs now offer formula-based exposure without the admin headache. But if you’re a hands-on investor, running your own Magic Formula screen could be a rewarding experiment in 2026’s ever-shifting market.