What’s Behind the Recent Rally in U.S. Small Cap Stocks?

Executive summary:

  • U.S. small cap stocks have soared due to falling yields and expectations for Fed easing
  • A Fed rate cut in September looks increasingly likely
  • The disinflation trend in the UK and Canada is continuing

On the latest edition of Market Week in Review, Director of Investment Strategies, Shailesh Kshatriya, discussed the recent strength in U.S. small cap stocks and the likelihood of a September rate cut from the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed). He also provided an update on the latest inflation numbers from Canada and the UK.

Two key factors powering the rise in U.S. small cap stocks

Kshatriya began by unpacking the recent outperformance of U.S. small cap equities over their large cap counterparts. Characterizing the comeback in small cap stocks as remarkable, he said that from July 11-18, U.S. small cap stocks—as measured by the Russell 2000® Index—outperformed the S&P 500® Index by around 6.5% and the Nasdaq 100 Index by nearly 10%. Prior to that, small caps had struggled mightily in comparison to their larger peers, he said.

“The catalyst for small cap's strong performance dates back to July 11’s softer-than-expected U.S. inflation report, which added confidence to the market that Fed rate cuts are nearing,” Kshatriya stated, noting that at one point, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield was down over 10 basis points (bps) from its peak earlier in July. Lower yields help small cap stocks, which are generally more interest-rate sensitive, he said. “Smaller companies tend to have a higher cost of borrowing, so falling yields are a tailwind,” Kshatriya explained.