After stellar run, smallcaps may see some turbulence
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[June 30, 2018]
By Chuck Mikolajczak
NEW YORK (Reuters) - After a strong rally
that saw the Russell 2000 notch a record in three straight sessions in
June, smallcap stocks may be showing signs of slowing down, leading some
market participants to question whether their recent bulletproof
performance is starting to crack.
After hitting lows on Feb. 8, the Russell 2000 <.RUT> has risen more
than 12 percent, far outpacing the gain of 5.2 percent in the largecap
S&P 500 <.SPX> index.
The smallcap index on Friday snapped an eight-week winning streak,
however, posting its largest weekly decline since late March, which
could indicate the start of a cooling off period.
"We are seeing an inverse relationship between size and value, the
bigger stocks are the better bargains and the smaller stocks aren’t,"
said Craig Callahan, President at ICON Funds in Denver.
"That would make me skeptical that over the next full year the smallcaps
could keep leading."
Investors have rushed into smallcaps this year, and the trend continued
this past week. Lipper data on Thursday showed smallcap growth funds
attracted $595 million of inflows for the week, their seventh straight
week of gains.
"The big thing has been the amount of money into smallcaps in general,
we have seen an awful lot of money just come pouring in," said Steve
DeSanctis, equity strategist at Jefferies in New York.
To view a graphic on Rebased chart of Russell 2000 vs S&P 500, click:
https://reut.rs/2tEjEY9
Smallcaps have become attractive to investors for a number of reasons.
Since they are mostly domestically focused, investors reason they are
more insulated from a potential trade war than a larger company with
more of a global footprint.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said on Friday a report by the
Axios news website, which cited sources as saying President Donald Trump
wanted the United States to withdraw from the World Trade Organization,
was wrong.
That domestic focus is also beneficial to smallcaps in the face of a
strengthening U.S. dollar, which can dent overseas profits of larger
multinational companies. After declining nearly 10 percent in 2017, the
greenback <.DXY> has rebounded in the second quarter with a gain of more
than 5 percent against a basket of major currencies.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York City, U.S., June 25, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Smaller names are also expected to see a bigger benefit from the tax cuts
announced by the Trump administration, with the effective tax rates for
smallcaps changed to 21 percent from 28 percent, while large caps will only see
their effective rate move down from an average of about 24 percent, according to
Julian Emanuel, chief equity and derivative strategist at BTIG in New York.
"The price action is confirming the fact that everything is now in smallcaps'
favor," said Emanuel.
But, Emanuel cautions that the Russell 2000 has underperformed in July, relative
to the S&P 500, as trades from the late June Russell rebalancing of its indexes
unwind. Since 2000, the Russell has underperformed the S&P by 1.1 percent in
July, according to BTIG.
And with May data from the National Federation of Independent Businesses showing
its small business optimism index registering the second-highest reading in its
history, a pullback is more likely, leaving not much room for further increases.
"If you look at the small business confidence chart it is hard to make the case
you are going to go higher, and if you don’t, it is hard to make the case that
smallcaps stocks aren’t going to underperform, then you throw on top of it the
seasonality," said Emanuel.
Even with these headwinds, smallcaps may still perform better on a relative
basis than larger names should trade worries persist, according to Lori
Calvasina, head of u.s. equity strategy at RBC Capital Markets in New York.
RBC recently upgraded their neutral view on smallcaps to one of preference over
largecaps.
"We are waking up in 2018 figuring out that the protectionist rhetoric from the
summer of 2016 is real. It is a real underlying philosophy of this
administration so I don’t think it is unwise to position accordingly," said
Calvasina.
"We don’t think there are any winners in a trade war, but it a question of who
the relative losers are - small caps lose less."
(Reporting by Chuck Mikolajczak; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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