What’s going on here? A stock index of smaller companies just notched its best five-day streak since 2020, with David coming up trumps over Goliath for the first time in a while. What does this mean? Until last week, US small-cap stocks – companies with a market value between $300 million and $2 billion – had been essentially flat all year. But that changed when an inflation report showed US consumer prices rising a lot less than expected in June. The news had traders betting that the Federal Reserve will move to lower its economy-dragging interest rates a tad earlier this year, and that kick-started a good ole rally in the small-cap department. See, slighter firms often carry some heavy short-term or variable-rate debt, so they get hit harder when borrowing costs go up – but they also get a bigger boost when those costs go down. And that’s why the Russell 2000 index, which houses these stocks, shot up by almost 12% in the past week. Why should I care? Zooming in: Slow train coming. The inflation report was the fuel that ignited the rally, sure, but the scene was set a while back. In the US, small-cap stocks have been underperforming their more sizable siblings since 2014. That’s left them trading cheap – really cheap. And that’s not just in comparison to big-cap shares, but also relative to their own history. So, naturally, they’ve become prime targets for bargain-hunting investors looking for a bit of risky business. The bigger picture: The race is on. Those investors rushing into small-cap stocks might find they’re onto a winner later this year. The bigger kids have been out in front recently, but it’s the smaller fries that appear poised to take the earnings growth lead. Analysts see them raking in 27% more profit this quarter compared to a year ago – and 67% next quarter. That’s significantly faster growth than what the weightier firms are expected to see. |