Small-Caps Enjoy Their Best November Yet

Small-Caps Enjoy Their Best November Yet
December 6, 2016
by Francis Gannon
of The Royce Funds
The stock market went on quite a tear in the 3+ weeks immediately following the election, with the
month of November especially beneficial for small-cap stocks.
Before delving into what it all might mean for small-cap investors, here's a quick rundown to help
contextualize just how dynamic a month it was:
1) This was the best November in the history of the Russell 2000 Index. featuring its highest monthly
return since October 2011 when small-caps were just emerging from a precipitous decline.
2) The performance spread between small-cap and large-cap was the widest in 14 years (since April
2002).The small-cap Russell 2000 index gained 11.2% for the month versus respective gains of 3.9%
and 3.7% for the large-cap Russell 1000 and S&P 500 Indexes.
3) Small-cap value enjoyed a good year's worth of results in one month! During November, the Russell
2000 Value advanced 13.3% compared to 9.0% for the Russell 2000 Growth.
4) Small-cap value earned an even bigger advantage quarter-to-date, thanks to better performance
during the mini-correction earlier in the quarter. From 9/30/16-11/30/16, small-cap value was up 9.6%
versus a gain of 2.2% for small-cap growth.
What drove small-cap value's lead?
The strength of small-cap value has come from cyclical (and diverse) sectors including Financials,
Industrials, Consumer Discretionary, Energy, and Materials.
Financials benefited from a steepening yield curve that should help to boost bank profits, while
optimism about accelerating economic growth helped Industrials and many Materials stocks. The U.S.
consumer has ratcheted up spending, and rebounding commodity prices helped both Energy and,
again, Materials.
Small-Cap Cyclical Sectors Lead in November
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Russell 2000 Sector Returns November 2016 and QTD
1
Real Estate, formerly part of Financials, became a separate GICS sector on 8/31/16.
What does this mean for small-cap investors?
To be sure, this is all welcome news, especially for small-cap active managers with a cyclical tilt.
After such a remarkable run, it’s also understandable to ask, perhaps with a bit of trepidation, where
small-caps go from here. We are contrarians, after all.
First, the current rally has exacerbated an already pronounced shift from growth to value while also
solidifying a move from large-cap to small-cap.
The post-election environment has also seen a dramatic rotation away from safety—bonds and
defensive stocks most notably. Investors have shown increased confidence in the potential for
accelerated economic growth and a likely policy shift from monetary to fiscal—chiefly in the form of tax
cuts and projected spending increases on infrastructure and defense.
How much of this is accurate and how much has already been priced in remain to be seen. Certainly,
we see these as the critical questions to be answered going forward.
It is not uncommon for major events (political or otherwise) to create outsized, short-term swings that
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manage to correct themselves as the future becomes clearer. We would not be at all surprised to see a
correction over the next few months.
After all, one result of the uptick is that many stocks now sport very high valuations based on these
great expectations.
As always, we think certain fundamentals will continue to matter as the interest rate environment (and
with it the economy as a whole) returns to a more historically normal (and, in this instance, possibly
inflationary) pattern.
From our perspective as small-cap specialists, we see the key fundamentals going forward as
earnings, profitability, the ability to self-fund, and valuations that we believe do not fully reflect these
positive attributes.
We view small-cap value's leadership as still comparably new and that the cycle will remain favorable
for both small-cap value and active approaches to the asset class.
Stay tuned…
Important Disclosure Information
Mr. Gannon's thoughts and opinions concerning the stock market are solely his own and, of course,
there can be no assurance with regard to future market movements. Past performance is no guarantee
of future results.
The Russell Investment Group is the source and owner of the trademarks, service marks, and
copyrights related to the Russell Indexes. Russell® is a trademark of Russell Investment Group. The
Russell 2000 Index is an unmanaged, capitalization-weighted index of domestic small-cap stocks. It
measures the performance of the 2,000 smallest publicly traded U.S. companies in the Russell 3000
Index. The Russell 2000 Value and Growth indexes consist of the respective value and growth stocks
within the Russell 2000 as determined by Russell Investments. The Russell 1000 index is an index of
domestic large-cap stocks. It measures the performance of the 1,000 largest publicly traded U.S.
companies in the Russell 3000 index. The S&P 500 is an index of U.S. large-cap stocks selected by
Standard & Poor's based on market size, liquidity, and industry grouping, among other factors. The
performance of an index does not represent exactly any particular investment, as you cannot invest
directly in an index.
This material is not authorized for distribution unless preceded or accompanied by a current
prospectus. Please read the prospectus carefully before investing or sending money. Investments in
securities of micro-cap, small-cap, and/or mid-cap companies may involve considerably more risk than
investments in securities of larger-cap companies. (Please see "Primary Risks for Fund Investors" in
the prospectus.)
© The Royce Funds
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