- Cavs down Bucks to improve to 8-0, Thunder unbeaten in West
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- Outsider Knight's Choice wins Melbourne Cup photo-finish thriller
- Chiefs stay perfect with overtime win over Bucs
- Uncertain Inter with questions to answer before Arsenal clash
- With Mbappe gone, misfiring PSG are under pressure in Champions League
- China's premier 'fully confident' of hitting growth targets
- North Korea fires short-range ballistic missile salvo ahead of US election
- Taiwan couple charged with trying to influence elections for China
- Indonesian President Prabowo to visit China this week
- Critically endangered Sumatran elephant calf born in Indonesia
- The marble 'living Buddhas' trapped by Myanmar's civil war
- How East Germany's 'traffic light man' became a beloved icon
- Japan expresses concern to China over Russia-North Korea ties
- Asian markets swing ahead of toss-up US election
- Palau polls open as pro-US president faces election test
- 'Panic buttons,' SWAT teams: US braces for election unrest
- Hundreds of UK police sacked for misconduct
- Harris, Trump fight through final campaign hours
- Top-ranked Nelly Korda wins LPGA Player of Year award
- Israel accuses Turkey of 'malice' over UN arms embargo call
- Man City will 'struggle' to overcome injury crisis, says Guardiola
- First candidates grilled in parliament test for EU top team
- Fulham strike twice in stoppage time to beat Brentford
- Saints fire head coach Allen after seventh straight NFL defeat
- Is the US election really so close?
- Mitrovic hat-trick fires Al Hilal past Esteghlal, Neymar replaced early
- Three charged as Modi slams Canada Hindu temple violence
- NATO will 'stay united' whoever wins US election: Rutte
- Turkey sacks 3 mayors on 'terror' charges, sparking fury in southeast
- Thousands protest alleged election fraud in Georgia
- Spain dreads more flood deaths on day six of rescue
- Germany's Baerbock offers Ukraine no guarantees as Kyiv sounds alarm
- Edu resigns as Arsenal sporting director
- Prince William plays rugby on S.Africa climate prize visit
- French boxing quits international body to keep its fighters at Olympics
- Gaza hospital hit as Israel tells UN aid agency ties to be cut
- Ailing Spurs coach Popovich reportedly out indefinitely
- Harris, Trump in last campaign push as polls deadlocked
- Sabalenka advances to WTA Finals last four as Zheng ousts Rybakina
- Noah Lyles fails to make cut for men's world track athlete of year
- Slot braced to face 'special' Alonso in Anfield homecoming
- Germany's Baerbock offers no Ukraine guarantees as Kyiv sounds alarm
- Montreux Jazz Festival hails 'godfather' Quincy Jones
- Chile football star Vidal accused of sexual assault
- Injured Atonio called up to France squad before Japan Test
- 'Guardiola best coach in the world', says Amorim before Man United move
- Fake X accounts promote COP hosts UAE, Azerbaijan
- Turkey sacks 3 pro-Kurdish mayors for 'terror ties'
- China's Zheng beats Rybakina at WTA Finals
2024 bull market leaves out US small caps, so far
A famous aphorism holds that a "rising tide lifts all boats," but small capitalization equities are still waiting for a boost from the 2024 bull market on Wall Street.
While the S&P 500, which is comprised of larger companies, has piled on more than 17 percent so far this year, the small-cap Russell 2000 has risen a scant 0.4 percent.
Market watchers point to lofty US interest rates -- at 22-year highs -- as one factor behind the yawning gulf in fortunes, given that smaller companies typically borrow more than larger peers because they are less profitable.
Smaller equities "tend to get hurt more by the higher rates," said Sam Burns, chief strategist at Mill Street Research.
"I think it's causing a big divergence in earnings, which then shows up in the relative returns."
But that dynamic also means that small cap equities could be poised to prosper if the Federal Reserve pulls the trigger and cuts interest rates soon.
A Fed interest rate cut in September could be the "first catalyst" for small caps to take off, said Art Hogan of B. Riley Wealth Management.
If that happens, "small caps can likely catch a bid in anticipation of the Fed cutting for the first time because, it tends to start a pattern of more cuts and lower interest rates," Hogan said.
Futures markets currently project two interest rate cuts in 2024, one in September, the other in December.
- Slowing economy? -
But not all market watchers attribute small caps' underperformance to high interest rates.
"It's more about what the economy is doing," said Kim Forrest, chief investment officer at Bokeh Capital Partners, who describes conditions as "soft."
"It's not even really tied to interest rates, because the companies certainly aren't going to borrow for expansion," she said.
CFRA Research's Sam Stovall considers high interest rates a reason for the initial lagging performance of small cap stocks.
But the stocks "did not tend to skyrocket shortly thereafter because of concern of an economic slowdown," he said.
Burns notes that a disproportionate share of the market's advance in 2024 has been enjoyed by large technology companies leading the generative artificial intelligence business, adding that the biggest companies are the best positioned to monetize advances.
Technology "is a much bigger proportion of the S&P 500 than it is for, say, the Russell 2000," Burns said. "And even within the tech sector, I think the large caps are still doing better than the smaller cap technology companies on average."
Forrest agrees, saying of "unloved" stocks in her portfolio, that "fundamentally, there's nothing wrong with them, other than they're not Nvidia."
Market participants also note the rising influence of exchange traded funds, or ETFs, which account for some $8 trillion held in US markets.
These investment vehicles are largely comprised of large cap companies.
Market watchers also see a bias in sentiment towards larger companies, even outside of tech.
"Big banks have gotten bigger," notes Burns, who sees multiple industries where smaller players "are struggling or just can't keep up."
X.Matos--PC