What Will Light a Fire under Small Caps?

Key Takeaways

  • Despite lagging the broader market, U.S. small caps now trade at a 21.8% valuation discount to large caps, levels last seen before major relative rallies in the 1970s and early 2000s.
  • With rate cuts, Jay Powell could set up a reversal that swings fortunes in favor of small caps.
  • Investors should consider focusing less on dollar predictions and more on small caps’ sensitivity to falling rates.

The house of pain continues with small caps, at least on a relative basis. Year-to-date, the S&P 600 index has posted a 3.0% gain, so it's not like money is being burned. But still, even the Bloomberg Aggregate Bond index is up 4.9% YTD and the S&P 500 is up 10.9%.1

BofA's fund flow data tells a thousand words.

Figure 1: A Tale of Two Asset Classes

We're at a moment of truth with large versus small, too. When I plot the S&P 100 relative to the big, broad Wilshire 5000 index, it is making its third attempt at resistance levels that date to the 1990s. If recent action holds, this would mark an important breakout for large caps.



Because of small caps' multi-year struggle, the group is trading at a 21.8% discount to large caps on reported earnings (figure 3). It doesn't mean a small-cap resurgence will start tomorrow, but I do find solace in these valuation gaps resembling the situation that manifested in both the mid-1970s and the turn of the century.

Small caps are cheap, at least relatively, but there is a potential 2026 headwind that we should address.