2 Small-Cap ETFs To Buy This Earnings Season

 | Jul 13, 2022 01:33PM ET

  • Investors are concerned about high inflation and aggressive rate hikes, even as they gear up for upcoming earnings
  • While large and mid caps garner most of the attention during earnings season, small caps offer considerable upside potential
  • ETFs that offer investors broad exposure to small-cap stocks
  • Wall Street is concerned about the latest Consumer Price data released on July 13, which saw inflation increase by 9.1% year-over-year. Numbers suggested “the increase was broad-based, with the indexes for gasoline, shelter and food being the largest contributors.”

    Readers may remember that May’s reading of 8.6% was the largest increase in more than four decades. Now, most analysts concur the Federal Reserve will continue its aggressive rate hikes the rest of the year.

    Meanwhile, investors are gearing up for new upcoming earnings. Despite the sell-off, earnings expectations on Wall Street have remained resilient across the board.

    Large and mid caps typically get the most attention during the reporting season. However, seasoned investors also pay attention to small-cap companies, which typically range from $300 million to $2 billion. Many of them have fallen significantly and are beginning to offer value for the long run.

    For instance, both the Russell 2000 Index and S&P 600 Small Cap plummeted around 25% since January. By comparison, the S&P 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average have dropped 22% and 16%, respectively.

    Portfolio manager at Royce Investment Partners Chuck Royce and Co-CIO Francis Gannon see long-term value in small-cap stocks, saying:

    “Small caps have averaged a 3% premium to large-caps over the past 20 years. At the end of June, however, small-caps were at a 20% discount, at their lowest relative valuation versus large-caps in more than 20 years.”

    We also remain confident of the performance of small caps in the months ahead. Given their risk/reward profiles, most small caps underperform the broader market during declines. But when the tide turns positive, they tend to lead on the upside.

    One of the best ways to take advantage of such growth would be to buy the dips of an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that offers broad exposure to small-cap stocks. Therefore, today’s article introduces two such funds. However, we should note that many small-cap ETFs include several mid-cap names as well.

    h2 1. Avantis U.S. Small Cap Value ETF/h2

    Current Price: $67.99
    52-Week Range: $66.41 - $84.59
    Dividend Yield: 1.91%
    Expense Ratio: 0.25% per year

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    The Avantis® U.S. Small Cap Value ETF (NYSE:AVUV) is an actively managed fund that invests in U.S. small caps trading at low valuations and with relatively high profitability ratios. The fund was first listed in September 2019.