Thursday, September 04, 2025
Are smaller companies about to have their moment?
By Vijay Valecha in 'Century in News'
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Vijay Valecha, September 4, 2025, The National
Small is beautiful, they say. Unfortunately, this hasn’t applied to smaller companies lately, which have fallen badly behind their large-cap rivals.
Lately, investors have been thinking big. Very big, in the shape of the trillion-dollar US mega-cap tech stocks like Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and Nvidia, that have dominated global portfolios.
They’ve sucked up all the attention as they deliver the kind of returns investors might expect from young, fast-growing companies.
Nvidia is the obvious example. Its shares have skyrocketed 1,270 per cent in the past five years. That’s the kind of return investors might dream of when buying penny stocks, not the world’s biggest company, now worth $4.28 trillion.
Over the past five years, the S&P 500 large-cap index has grown by 85 per cent, while the Russell 2000 index of smaller firms is up just 50 per cent.
In the UK, conditions are equally tough. The Alternative Investment Market (AIM) has fallen 25 per cent over five years, at a time when London’s FTSE 100 blue-chip index climbed 54 per cent.
Richard Penny of Oberon Investments, a long-time UK small-cap and AIM specialist, has called AIM “the worst I have ever seen it”, given entrenched dislike by both domestic and international investors.
Investing is cyclical, and Mr Penny suggests that at some point the tide will turn. The problem, as ever, is that nobody knows when.
Traditionally, smaller companies have a strong track record of outperforming larger peers, but with more volatility along the way. Given how far they are trailing today, taking a chance on them may be worthwhile, though not without risk.
But there are signs that smaller companies are picking up, with the S&P 500 and Russell 2000 running neck and neck lately. Both are up 10 per cent in the past six months, while over the past month, the US small-cap index grew 6 per cent, three times faster than its large-cap rival at 2 per cent.
Markets are currently pricing about an 85 per cent probability of a 25-basis-point Fed cut in September, with just over half a percentage point of cuts pencilled in for the rest of 2025. Historically, the Russell 2000 has delivered strong returns in the year after the Fed ends a rate-cutting cycle, Mr Shitole says, driven by improved credit conditions and stronger domestic demand.
Yet Mr Trump could come to their rescue. Smaller firms are much more exposed to their domestic economy, with small caps generating around 80 per cent of their revenue in the US compared to 60 per cent for the S&P 500.
So, how to invest? Most say new investors will favour a fund over individual stocks, and this is an area where active fund managers often claim they can shine, by picking out tomorrow’s winners.
Yet in one respect, ETFs may also be part of the small-cap problem. The relentless popularity of passive investing has channelled ever more money into the biggest stocks, squeezing out smaller ones.
For now, the giants remain in charge, but smaller companies are stirring. Patient investors willing to stomach the volatility could find today’s deep discounts hard to ignore. Others may struggle to tear themselves away from the mega-caps.
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