Small-Caps: What Will It Take For Them To Shine?

 | Aug 31, 2020 07:23AM ET

Since the 1993 publication by Eugene Fama and Kenneth French of their landmark paper “ ,” the small-cap effect has been seen as one of the pillars of factor-based investing — at least as far as the academic/quant community has been concerned. For investors more interested in making money than publishing papers, however, those pillars have been shaky at best. So what’s the deal? Will the little guys eventually roar back to life, or should investors and money managers consider defunding the small-cap equities and ETFs?h3 What Exactly Is The Small-Cap Effect/h3

In terms of financial theory and logic, it doesn’t and never did exist. Stocks are valued with respect to the present value of expected cash flows (however one wants to articulate that mathematically), and none of this bears any relationship to the size of the company or the market capitalization of its stock.

Fama-French made a big deal about size because statistical studies they conducted on past stock price behavior showed them that during the time periods they examined, small-caps performed better than large caps. Had the study been done at a time when large-caps outperformed, they and their follower's investors would have been talking about a large-cap effect.

Therein lies the problem. When we study what was (based on historic data) without reference to what should be (based on financial theory and logic), we can wind up with odd and unstable conclusions.

h3 The Changing Fortunes Of Small-Cap/h3

As late as 2000 and subsequent years — as automation and quant modeling were catching on in a big way, it looked like the small-cap effect publicized seven-years earlier was very much for real.

Figure 1 – Ratio of small-cap-oriented iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) to the large-cap-oriented SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSE:SPY), Early Years