May 2024, From the Field
Index |
Total Return |
Valuation |
Growth |
Momentum |
Quality |
Profitability |
Risk |
Size |
Russell 1000 Growth |
11.41% |
2.62% |
2.07% |
13.79% |
0.53% |
10.65% |
2.90% |
3.84% |
MSCI Japan |
11.16 |
8.07 |
3.14 |
18.11 |
-5.16 |
1.85 |
6.58 |
15.49 |
Russell 1000 |
10.30 |
0.39 |
3.43 |
14.01 |
3.01 |
10.80 |
0.57 |
7.74 |
Russell 1000 Value |
8.99 |
2.20 |
2.84 |
15.26 |
3.48 |
10.31 |
-0.71 |
7.93 |
Russell 2500 |
6.92 |
-4.15 |
0.43 |
5.34 |
-0.51 |
3.05 |
-4.13 |
5.94 |
MSCI Europe |
5.39 |
-1.53 |
7.54 |
6.43 |
-0.83 |
8.28 |
0.31 |
9.02 |
MSCI Emerging Markets |
2.44 |
9.44 |
3.03 |
14.28 |
4.38 |
8.43 |
-5.81 |
6.01 |
MSCI Pacific ex-Japan |
-1.71 |
-4.44 |
6.50 |
17.19 |
4.78 |
6.03 |
-7.71 |
5.64 |
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.
Sources: Refinitiv/IDC data, Compustat, Worldscope, Russell, MSCI. Analysis by T. Rowe Price. See Additional Disclosures. Total return data are in U.S. dollars. Factor returns are calculated as equal-weighted quintile spreads. Please see Appendix for more details on the factors
The first quarter of 2024 was marked by continued interest in artificial intelligence (AI)-related stocks, alongside growing signs of an economic soft landing, leading to debate over the number and timing of possible Federal Reserve interest rate cuts. Against this backdrop, we highlight three key themes:
In some ways, momentum looks primed for a correction: It has had outsized recent performance, and we see signs of froth in some areas (e.g., AI and bitcoin) with post-recessionary conditions in others (e.g., real estate and some industrials), and momentum was highly correlated with quality in the first quarter, a common precursor to momentum corrections.
In other ways, momentum does not look traditionally risky. It does not appear overly concentrated in certain sectors or industries; our research shows it is not expensive; many of the high-momentum stocks have very strong fundamentals such that stock performance has been driven by earnings growth rather than by multiple expansion; and markets are at all-time highs, unlike the conditions in which quality and momentum correlations would normally be concerning.
Synthesizing our views, we suggest investors monitor and manage their momentum exposures as appropriate to their situation, analyze whether their momentum is coming from concentrated versus broad drivers, and consider the long and short legs separately (e.g., overweight AI stocks versus underweight cyclical stocks). However, we do not have the evidence or conviction yet to sound a broad alarm on momentum.
Given the underperformance of small-cap stocks and lofty valuations among large-caps, investors are increasingly asking about small-cap opportunities at what appear to be attractive relative valuations. It is important to note that when referencing small-cap valuations, much of the commentary refers exclusively to those companies with positive earnings. We think it’s important to analyze the difference between the entire small-cap universe, which includes money‑losing companies, and subsets of the small-cap universe, which could be more attractive.
In this newsletter, we assess the valuation of small-caps using both approaches. We also lay out important compositional changes over the last 20 years in the large- versus small-cap universes, as we think it’s necessary to consider relative fundamentals in any discussion of relative valuation. We share four key findings:
For the purposes of this newsletter, we focus on the Russell 2000 Index as a reference class for small-caps and the Russell 1000 Index for large-caps. The performance of small-cap stocks has lagged large‑caps by 666 basis points on an average annual basis over the last five years (as of March 31, 2024), and, more recently, extremely narrow markets have amplified the valuation disparity.
Today, the small-cap stock universe (including companies with negative earnings) is trading at a small premium to the large-cap universe based on 12-month forward price/earnings ratios, but after adjusting for their historical relationship, this represents a 10% discount (Figure 2). We note that this relationship can be noisy due to the inclusion of negative earners, which is why many analysts exclude them. However, we feel it is important to include companies with negative earnings because traditional passive approaches buy the aggregate earnings of all index components and pays for the aggregate market capitalization. From this perspective, the valuation opportunity is mixed.
However, when removing negative earners—to reflect a higher‑quality subset of the small-cap universe—the valuation opportunity becomes much more compelling, with a discount of 25% relative to the historical relationship (Figure 2).
To understand why relative valuations have changed, we need to understand fundamental changes in the things being valued. We look at relative differences in fundamentals between small- and large-cap stocks over the same period where valuations diverged. A mistake analysts can make when comparing different universes of stocks through time is failing to account for changes in composition between the two things being compared, which can distort results. We highlight three material compositional changes in the small-cap universe compared with large-caps: lower relative profitability, lower relative growth, and changes in relative sector weights.
Change #1: Companies choosing private over public markets limits attractive small-cap stock opportunities
In the past, companies like Microsoft and Intel went public as small‑caps and graduated into the large-cap space. Over time, we have observed that more companies are choosing to stay private until they have a larger market capitalization. This reflects the growth of private equity markets and founders’ desire to forgo the complexities and oversight of public markets. As a result, the universe of public equities has shrunk from over 7,000 in 1996 to over 4,000 today. This means the small-cap universe has lost some of its historically attractive members, and index construction rules imply that passive benchmarks must go deeper into the pool of publicly traded stocks (Figure 3). As a result, the percentage of small-cap companies with negative earnings has risen from about 5% in the mid-1990s to approximately 30% today (Figure 4). Small companies generally have market capitalizations of $10 billion or less, while large companies generally have market capitalizations of $50 billion or more.
The shrinking public equity universe is not the only driver of profitability differences between large- and small-caps. Technology and regulations have increased the economies of scale in many industries, globalization has provided a tailwind to large multinational companies, and large companies have taken advantage of lower interest rates and taxes in the last two decades to boost margins. There has also been a sectoral composition change that we will discuss shortly. All these factors have led to large-caps showing significant improvement in gross margins and profitability that small-caps have been unable to match (Figure 5).
Change #2: The growth advantage of small-caps has deteriorated
As a result of growth companies staying private longer, in tandem with the unprecedented and sustained growth of mega-cap platform companies, the growth of small-caps relative to large-caps has declined. Historically, investors viewed the small-cap universe as a source of superior earnings growth, but our data today suggest that this advantage has dissipated to about parity.
Change #3: Sector composition
With the advantages of scale in technology and platform companies, there has been a migration of information technology stocks from the small- to the large-cap universe. Meanwhile, “old economy” companies with slower growth and greater cyclicality have migrated to the small‑cap space. An illustrative example is the energy sector, where concerns over terminal values have led to declining investor interest—and market capitalization—in these stocks (Figure 6). This compositional mix partially explains relative valuations. Information technology and communication services have gone from a 4% overweight in small‑caps in 2007 to a 22% underweight. This is a huge 26% shift in sector composition from peak to trough over the last 30 years.
We emphasize that, while there are still many quality companies in the small-cap space, these differences in fundamentals are part of the mosaic through which we must interpret relative valuation opportunities.
In contrast to secular fundamental changes, we also highlight temporary macroeconomic forces that have introduced cyclical headwinds.
Most importantly, rising interest rates have been a double whammy for small-caps. First, small-cap stocks tend to be longer-duration assets, as a greater percentage of their earnings typically lie in the future. As a result, rising rates have had a more significant impact on their justified valuations. Second, small-caps tend to have more floating rate debt, so they are more immediately sensitive to interest rate changes than large-caps. Relatedly, small‑caps have a larger portion of debt maturing in 2024 and 2025, creating a near-term headwind from financing costs. As a result, small-caps have been particularly interest rate sensitive during the recent monetary policy tightening cycle (Figure 7).
In addition, small-caps have underperformed due to concerns about their cyclicality. While many economists predicted a recession that has yet to materialize, beneath the surface we have observed “rolling recessions,” with different industries experiencing growth slowdowns at different times. As small-cap stocks tend to be more cyclical, historically they have struggled more during growth slowdowns but have recovered more strongly afterward.
Looking forward, the market is pricing in some Federal Reserve interest rate cuts this year, as well as a broadening earnings growth recovery. We believe these dynamics will present an eventual tailwind for small-caps when they materialize.
Given these offsetting dynamics, our research suggests that there are significant, yet nuanced, opportunities within small-caps. Importantly, these opportunities appear more available to active investors, and we, therefore, have a higher conviction level today in active small-cap management than we do a passive approach mirroring the small-cap index. The three opportunities we will discuss are:
First, a more attractive macroeconomic backdrop would be a tailwind for small-cap stocks. The market has increasingly adjusted expectations for an economic soft landing (or no landing) alongside measured interest rate cuts, which, historically, has been a positive environment for small-caps. We believe that, if markets are wrong and a recession materializes, falling rates could be a material headwind for small-caps.
Our data, however, support the optimistic view. We have observed a de-synchronized earnings recession in the U.S. by sector and by size. Large-caps started seeing positive earnings growth in the third quarter of 2023, whereas small-caps are projected to see positive growth and acceleration in the second quarter of 2024. Per consensus expectations, the second half of 2024 should see the more cyclical small-cap stocks in the Russell 2000 Index outgrow their large-cap counterparts (Figure 8).
Second, small-cap stocks have greater dispersion (a potentially wide range) in their fundamentals and their total returns. Based on our analysis, the best- and worst‑performing stocks come from the small-cap space. In fact, even in a year dominated by mega-cap technology stocks, a disproportionate share of the highest stock returns in 2023 still came from the small-cap universe (Figure 9). We believe that active management can add significant value in small-cap stock selection, even when the index underperforms, if the skilled active manager is able to exploit this dispersion with outperforming stocks.
Finally, we think there is an extremely compelling valuation opportunity within quality small-caps.
Recalling Figure 2, there is a significant valuation opportunity among the small-caps with positive earnings that is much less compelling for the index as a whole. However, to do the analysis properly, we can’t just look at positive earners because the absolute levels of return on equity (ROE) may still be lower than those in large-caps. To get a true apples-to-apples analysis, we ranked all stocks in the Russell 3000 Index—a proxy for the entire U.S. equity market—by ROE (Figure 10). We note that the small-cap space has a long tail of negative ROE stocks, but both the Russell 1000 and Russell 2000 Indexes have a critical mass of positive earners with similar profitability. To understand the opportunity, we took large- and small-cap stocks with similarly high ROEs and compared their valuations (Figure 11).
The critical takeaway is that among stocks with similarly high ROEs, the small-cap universe is valued at a 34% discount. Why would this be the case? Our hypotheses are:
Based on our analysis, starting valuations have shown to be highly correlated to long-term outsized returns (Figure 12). Current small-cap valuations provide, in our opinion, a great setup for potential long-term gains. Focusing on the high-quality cohort within small-caps should allow investors to gain from the market dislocation without assuming unwanted risks.
Small-caps appear to be undervalued today relative to large‑caps. We think that the reality is more nuanced and requires a thoughtful analysis of valuation techniques (such as whether to include negative earners) and of the changing composition of small-caps versus large-caps. We conclude that the small-cap index as a whole may be slightly attractive, but it is not a high-conviction view: The index appears to be relatively cheaper than history versus large-caps, but also with weaker fundamentals. The optionality of the asset class is supported by potential macro tailwinds and a compelling starting valuation. However, we believe there is a higher probability and, thus, compelling opportunity for higher‑quality small-caps that have been left behind and are at a historically attractive valuation level compared with history. We believe the supportive macroeconomic backdrop, attractive valuations, and opportunity for outsized returns present a compelling opportunity for active small-cap allocations.
Factors are our internally constructed metrics defined as follows:
Valuation: Proprietary composite of valuation metrics based on earnings, sales, book value, and dividends. Specific value factor weighting may vary by region and sector. The valuation factor evaluates the relative attractiveness of a company’s stock price as a multiple of company earnings, sales, book value, or dividends paid.
Growth: Proprietary composite of growth metrics based on historical and forward-looking earnings and sales growth. Factor selection and weighting vary by region and industry. The growth factor assesses company growth prospects using historical earnings, sales, and predicted earnings.
Momentum: Proprietary measure of medium-term price momentum. Price momentum measures the change in a company’s stock price, and the momentum factor provides a gauge of market sentiment or persistence of a trend.
Quality: Proprietary measure of quality based on fundamental and stock price stability, balance sheet strength, various measures of profitability, capital usage, and earnings quality. The quality factor assesses the relative attractiveness of a company typically based on volatility, debt servicing capacity, and profitability.
Profitability: Return on equity (ROE) is a financial ratio that measures profitability.
Risk: Proprietary composite capturing stock return stability over multiple time horizons (positive return means risky stocks outperform stable stocks).
Size: The size-based factor helps assess returns based on market capitalization (positive return means larger stocks outperform smaller stocks).
Active investing may have higher costs than passive investing and may underperform the broad market or passive peers with similar objectives.
Small-cap stocks have generally been more volatile in price than the large-cap stocks.
All investments are subject to market risk, including the possible loss of principal.
1Momentum is an observed tendency for rising prices of securities to rise further, and for falling prices to continue falling.
Factors or factor analysis involves targeting quantifiable firm characteristics, or “factors,” that can explain differences in stock returns. Over the last 50 years, academic research has identified hundreds of factors that impact stock returns. See Appendix for financial terms used throughout this content. The data presented in this material is for illustrative purposes only and does not represent an actual investment nor any T. Rowe Price product. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.
For more information visit https://www.troweprice.com/en/us/glossary.
Additional Disclosure
© 2024 Refinitiv. All rights reserved.
MSCI and its affiliates and third party sources and providers (collectively, “MSCI”) makes no express or implied warranties or representations and shall have no liability whatsoever with respect to any MSCI data contained herein. The MSCI data may not be further redistributed or used as a basis for other indices or any securities or financial products. This report is not approved, reviewed, or produced by MSCI. Historical MSCI data and analysis should not be taken as an indication or guarantee of any future performance analysis, forecast or prediction. None of the MSCI data is intended to constitute investment advice or a recommendation to make (or refrain from making) any kind of investment decision and may not be relied on as such.
London Stock Exchange Group plc and its group undertakings (collectively, the “LSE Group”). © LSE Group 2024. FTSE Russell is a trading name of certain of the LSE Group companies. Russell® is a trade mark of the relevant LSE Group companies and is/are used by any other LSE Group company under license. All rights in the FTSE Russell indexes or data vest in the relevant LSE Group company which owns the index or the data. Neither LSE Group nor its licensors accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the indexes or data and no party may rely on any indexes or data contained in this communication. No further distribution of data from the LSE Group is permitted without the relevant LSE Group company’s express written consent. The LSE Group does not promote, sponsor or endorse the content of this communication. The LSE Group is not responsible for the formatting or configuration of this material or for any inaccuracy in T. Rowe Price’s presentation thereof.
Copyright © 2024, S&P Global Market Intelligence (and its affiliates, as applicable). Reproduction of any information, data or material, including ratings (“Content”) in any form is prohibited except with the prior written permission of the relevant party. Such party, its affiliates and suppliers (“Content Providers”) do not guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, completeness, timeliness or availability of any Content and are not responsible for any errors or omissions (negligent or otherwise), regardless of the cause, or for the results obtained from the use of such Content. In no event shall Content Providers be liable for any damages, costs, expenses, legal fees, or losses (including lost income or lost profit and opportunity costs) in connection with any use of the Content. A reference to a particular investment or security, a rating or any observation concerning an investment that is part of the Content is not a recommendation to buy, sell or hold such investment or security, does not address the suitability of an investment or security and should not be relied on as investment advice. Credit ratings are statements of opinions and are not statements of fact.
T. Rowe Price calculations using data from FactSet Research Systems Inc. All rights reserved.
Important Information
This material is provided for informational purposes only and is not intended to be investment advice or a recommendation to take any particular investment action.
The views contained herein are those of the authors as of March 2024 and are subject to change without notice; these views may differ from those of other T. Rowe Price associates.
This information is not intended to reflect a current or past recommendation concerning investments, investment strategies, or account types, advice of any kind, or a solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any securities or investment services. The opinions and commentary provided do not take into account the investment objectives or financial situation of any particular investor or class of investor. Please consider your own circumstances before making an investment decision.
Information contained herein is based upon sources we consider to be reliable; we do not, however, guarantee its accuracy. Actual future outcomes may differ materially from any estimates or forward-looking statements made.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. All investments are subject to market risk, including the possible loss of principal. There is no assurance that any investment objective will be achieved. All charts and tables are shown for illustrative purposes only.
T. Rowe Price Investment Services, Inc., distributor. T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc., investment adviser.
© 2024 T. Rowe Price. All Rights Reserved. T. ROWE PRICE, INVEST WITH CONFIDENCE, and the Bighorn Sheep design are, collectively and/or apart, trademarks of T. Rowe Price Group, Inc.