Small Caps Sizzle; Commodities And REITs Shine

 | Mar 11, 2021 12:06AM ET

h2 Is secular regime change afoot for small-cap value stocks?

History suggests that small-company shares trading at a discount to book value (or some other measure of a company’s worth) offer some of the highest expected returns in the equity space. The last several years, however, offer a different perspective, courtesy of weak performance in small-cap value relative to the broad market. But 2021 suggests regime change may be bubbling.

Using the iShares S&P Small-Cap 600 Value ETF (NYSE:IJS) as a proxy shows a sharp turnaround in relative performance vs. the overall market, based on SPDR S&P 500 (SPY). As the chart below shows, IJS has soared recently relative to SPY. The question is whether this is a game of catch-up that will soon fade?

Small value was hit especially hard by the pandemic last year, falling substantially more than SPY and recovering less ground initially. But the tide has turned in IJS’s favor. It’s not yet clear if the IJS rocket is merely closing the performance gap that widened vs. its larger-cap counterparts.

The alternative narrative: the IJS rebound is the first installment of an extended run of outperformance fueled by an economic expansion that appears to be heating up. All the more so in the wake of the House's approval for Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus/relief bill. One more reason to think that the case is strengthening for expecting IJS to maintain its red-hot run for the foreseeable future.