We are likely to see a rotation to smaller stocks this year
As any long-term investor knows, trying to finely time the market is an excellent way to set yourself up for stress and disappointment. However, over the longer-term, markets tend to revert to norms and follow similar cycles and historical patterns. There are several factors which have been impeding the growth of smaller companies and these are likely to turn throughout the year.
Smaller companies are more sensitive to interest rates; tending to struggle in a higher interest rate environment. They also generally find it harder to issue bonds and pay more for credit than larger companies. This trend is increased when markets are volatile: credit spreads tend to widen, increasing the gap between what the smallest and largest companies pay for credit, and putting smaller companies at a competitive disadvantage.
According to James Eisenman, portfolio manager at Vaughan Nelson, the economic cycle may also benefit smaller companies this year:
“Smaller companies tend to move more cyclically than larger companies. With global growth set to bottom over the next two quarters and an acceleration in growth likely in the back half of 2024, the setup is attractive for Global SMIDs”
All smaller companies will not rise in unison
While conditions, in general, look favourable for smaller companies over the medium to long term, this does not mean all smaller companies will rise equally. When you reach the lower end of small cap indices there is a much higher proportion of unprofitable and speculative companies. For example there are many more speculative and unprofitable companies in an index like the Russell 2000, than in the MSCI ACWI SMID Cap Index, as it has much larger, more established companies. Now that interest rates are higher and capital has a real cost once more, many of these unprofitable companies have been burning through their funds. While corporate bankruptcy rates in the US rose significantly in 2023 they are still far lower than they were a decade ago. There remain many publicly listed companies struggling to survive and many of these are likely to go under this year.
In any market cycle there are always investment opportunities, the difficulty is in identifying them. For example, last year regional banks in the US had a torrid time. After Silicon Valley Bank became troubled, all US regional banks were sold off, no matter what their underlying fundamentals were like. The US Regional Banking Index was down 44% from February 7, 2023 to its low on May 4, 2023. For James Eisenman, this created an opportunity to pick up high-quality banking names at bargain prices.
“We started investing in two U.S. regional banks in the back half of 2023. It was clear to us that these banks had strong fundamentals and they had been sold off indiscriminately by investors. These banks rose significantly during the Q4 2023 equity rally, making us an excellent profit. While this is obviously an ideal investing scenario, we would have been happy to wait much longer than this for our profits as we were confident that we had bought quality companies that were undervalued by the market.”
In the same way as regional banks, there is an opportunity, right now, to buy companies in the global SMID space that can benefit from the same AI themes that have driven Nvidia and other big tech companies to eye-popping valuations. However, unlike Nvidia, they are much less known by investors, covered less by analysts, and so have much lower valuations. Unfortunately, like any red-hot investing theme, there are many companies trying to catch a ride on the AI-train. Many investing presentations and company reports are peppered with AI-buzzwords and it takes detailed bottom up fundamental stock analysis to separate real value from the value traps – true growth stocks from meme stocks.
When will small cap stocks rally?
Trying to time market rallies is like catching a baseball between your teeth: you may end up looking like a hero, but you’re much more likely to end up with a black eye. While conditions seem favourable for small and mid-cap companies this year, working out exactly when they will rally is almost impossible. We do know that when interest rates drop, this is likely to be beneficial for all stocks, but particularly smaller companies. In addition, we are in a US election year and both the US Federal Reserve and the US Federal Government have a vested interest in boosting the economy closer to election time which is also likely to provide strong support to markets.
Valuations for global SMID caps look attractive on an absolute basis and relative to history. While we wouldn’t recommend blindly investing in a swathe of smaller caps, we do think that the first half of this year is likely to be a good time to increase your allocation to high-quality small and medium-sized companies.
Australian investors can access Vaughan Nelson’s best investment ideas in global small-mid (SMID) cap expertise. Find out more at VaughanNelson.com.au.