U.S. Small Cap Equity Fund Flows: Capitulation?

 | Aug 30, 2021 01:01AM ET

This article was originally published at TopDown Charts

  • US small caps experienced record outflows and a surge in bearish speculative positioning; these contrarian indicators make us lean bullish

  • Forward valuations are favorable for the S&P Small Cap 600 versus the S&P 500

  • Investors must pay close attention to changes in the macro environment, given the linkages with bond yields and the sectoral differences.

The ongoing correction in small caps is well-noted in the financial blogosphere. The Russell 2000’s trading range since February has been a choppy mess as technicians stand by to pounce on a breakdown or breakout. We took a deeper dive in this edition of the Weekly Macro Themes report.

Recent Weakness After a Hot Start/h2

Small caps were strong out of the gate in 2021 as the risk-on, high beta narrative continued after jumpstarting in early November of last year. By mid-March, small caps were ahead of large caps by about 14% before mega caps regained leadership. After several months of consolidation and relative weakness, is now the time for the little guys to show their muster? We think there’s a chance, for a few reasons.

Positioning and Flows/h3

First, speculative positioning has collapsed according to the CFTC Commitment of Traders report. It seems traders have had enough of the Russell 2000’s frustrating price-action. The CoT data is the most bearish since early 2019, near the bottom end of its range dating back to 2009. Moreover, investors are pulling funds from the Russell 2000—fund flows on a 90-day rolling basis are at record lows (see chart). These are extreme (and contrarian) sentiment readings that you might expect at bear market bottoms.

Featured Chart from our Weekly Macro Themes Report: Record Russell 2000 Outflows