Small-cap equities are garnering increased attention from investors, and for good reason. Small-caps are trading at historically cheap valuations relative to large-caps, amid a backdrop of robust US economic growth and expectations of earnings reacceleration. This is typically a recipe for small-cap equity outperformance.
However, significant developments have reshaped the landscape of small-cap investing, making the implementation of a small-cap allocation less straightforward today. Investors have generally been flocking to passively managed strategies, which track a broad-based index, but doing so in the small-cap space looks to be a suboptimal approach. There are several reasons why.
Declining exposure to growth businesses in the small-cap index
The S&P SmallCap 600® index offers less exposure to innovative, growth-oriented companies than it has historically. Analyzing sector allocations of the S&P 600® reveals a noteworthy trend: a surge in cyclical sectors coupled with a decline in growth sectors over the past 20 years (Figure 1). This is how we define these sector groupings:
- Cyclical sectors – higher earnings sensitivity to the economic growth: Financials, Industrials, Materials, Energy, and Real Estate.
- Growth sectors – higher long-term growth rates due to their products and services being tied to innovative technology and secular trends: Information Technology, Communication Services, and Consumer Discretionary.