Why small caps belong in your portfolio

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

The writer is a vice-president at Dimensional Fund Advisors and co-host of the “Informed Investor” podcast

The rationale for investing in the stocks of small companies is well established through empirical record, academic literature and decades of practical asset allocation. Over the past century, small caps have outperformed large caps by roughly 1.5 percentage points annually.

The recent outperformance of large companies has obscured the benefits for long-term investors who allocate some of their portfolio to US and global small caps. Popular misguided narratives about the state of small caps have not helped.

Since small caps represent a meaningful part of the global market — about 10 per cent of the US by market capitalisation — they belong in a diversified portfolio. These are companies from a variety of sectors and many have the potential for significant returns. After all, firms such as Nvidia were start-ups before they were giants.

Those worried about overexposure to the currently high-priced US market might find small-cap valuations compelling. While the aggregate price to trailing earnings multiple for US large caps has grown to more than 30 times — nearly double the average since 1963 of 17.6 — the ratio for US small-cap stocks is just 16.4.

Spreading investment to small caps helps lessen the exposure investors have to top stocks such as the Magnificent Seven, which now account for more than 35 per cent of the weight of the S&P 500 index.

And there are good reasons to question the aberrational recent returns of US large caps.

Large caps beat small caps by more than 8 percentage points annualised (19.7 per cent vs 11.6 per cent, respectively) over the three years to June 30 2025, according to Dimensional indices. But historical context for those two returns is important.

The S&P 500 index’s return over that stretch was nearly double its long-run average since June 1927. Contrast that with US small caps, where returns hewed much more closely to their long-run average of 11.6 per cent for three years and 11.9 per cent since 1927.

Expecting a continuation of large-cap returns well in excess of the historical norm is a bet on further unexpected success stories for these firms.

As for small caps, much postmortem effort has been devoted to uncovering causes why they have trailed bigger peers in recent years. These have revolved around the idea of a “new normal” incorporating everything from the impact of private equity (resulting in fewer IPOs or older market debutants) to technology upheaval (mainly AI).

The volatility of stock return data makes it hard to identify trends like these in market pricing. But one data point makes a compelling case that a key mechanism responsible for the premium for investing in smaller caps historically is alive and well.

Migration, when firms grow into the mid or large caps, has been a key driver of the long-run outperformance of small stocks. The good news for investors is that this migration has been occurring at roughly the same frequency even in recent years — 11 per cent in the last 10 years and 10.1 per cent since 1926.

It’s also worth noting that the data on the size premium has been rosier outside the US. In non-US developed markets, small caps have been about even with large caps over the past three years and have outperformed over the past half-decade.

Some of the concern over the small-cap asset class has focused on deteriorating financials for firms of this size. These concerns are not unfounded but pertain primarily to one specific subset of the small-cap market — in particular, stocks with high valuations and low profitability. You don’t need an economics degree to know that this combination of characteristics is bad for expected returns.

Excluding low-profitability growth stocks — the bottom quartile of companies ranked by operating profits as a percentage of net assets or book equity — substantially improves expected returns from small caps (15.17 per cent annualised for US equities since 1975 compared to 13.95).

The largest and most successful companies of today were small caps once upon a time. A broadly diversified allocation to the small-cap market can help long-term investors capture future winners from today’s smaller firms.

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

Wall Street’s New Trade Is Dumping Stocks in AI’s Crosshairs

(Bloomberg) — On Wall Street, rising fears about artificial intelligence keep pummeling shares of companies at risk of being caught on the wrong side of it all, from small software makers to big wealth-management firms. Most Read from Bloomberg The latest selloff came on Wednesday with European wealth management firms St James’s Place Plc and

Stoxx 600, FTSE 100, Heineken, Siemens Energy earnings

Imported beer, including Heineken, for sale at a store in New York City on April 10, 2025.  Timothy A. Clary | Afp | Getty Images European equities edged lower on Wednesday, as regional investors assessed another flurry of corporate earnings. By 9:10 a.m. in London (4:10 a.m. ET), the pan-European Stoxx 600 was around 0.2%

This Growth Stock Continues to Crush the Market

And it could have plenty more upside ahead. Despite some volatility, SoFi Technologies (SOFI 0.84%), a fintech specialist, has performed well over the past three years, with its shares jumping more than 76% during that period. SoFi still has plenty of upside left, given its outstanding financial results and attractive long-term opportunities. Here’s why the

What’s Wrong With Palantir Technologies Stock?

The tech stock has been falling, despite posting another strong quarter. Palantir Technologies (PLTR 2.38%) stock is struggling in 2026. Although the business itself remains in great shape, investors aren’t buying it up as rapidly as they were last year. As of Monday’s close, the data analytics stock has fallen by 20%. While the stock

‘Black Swan’ Fund Chief Predicts Stocks Will Explode Higher Then Crash

Prepare for stocks to rocket higher then suffer a crushing decline, the boss of a “Black Swan” fund says. “I’ve been looking for a blow-off in equities for over three years now — followed by the worst crash since 1929,” Mark Spitznagel, the founder and chief investor of Universa Investments, told Business Insider in a

Wall Street is searching for AI winners and losers

New York  —  For years, anything exposed to artificial intelligence was a hot trade on Wall Street. But today’s investors are more selective, demanding stronger evidence that companies are poised to benefit from the AI boom. Wall Street is debating whether software companies can protect their market share from AI startups’ new tools. Investors have

Why you shouldn’t worry about AI eating the stock market, top analyst says. The economy is ‘about to take off’

The first week of February was a doozy in markets. Anthropic, one of the more outspoken companies in the artificial intelligence space, rattled stocks with the seeming superpowers of its Claude chatbot, prompting a selloff across the software sector with potential obsolescence suddenly knocking at its door. Marta Norton, chief investment strategist at Empower Investments,

Memory Chip Crunch Ripples Through Markets, With Worse to Come

Bloomberg, inSpectrum (Bloomberg) — The relentless surge in memory chip prices over the past few months has driven a vast divide between winners and losers in the stock market, and investors don’t see any end in sight. Companies from game console maker Nintendo Co. to big PC brands and Apple Inc. suppliers are seeing shares

Amazon Stock Quote

Prediction: Amazon’s Sell-Off Will Set Up a Monster Rebound in 2026

Should you buy Amazon stock on the dip? Absolutely. Earnings seasons can sometimes be rough. We’re seeing it this time around with several AI stocks. Advanced Micro Devices‘ (AMD +3.70%) and Microsoft‘s (MSFT +3.24%) shares plunged after its recent quarterly update. Google parent Alphabet‘s (GOOG +0.40%) (GOOGL +0.45%) stock declined moderately despite reporting impressive results.

Got $5,000? 2 Tech Stocks to Buy and Hold for the Long Term

The smartest investors pay attention to the major trends shaping the economy and markets. One of the biggest themes in the stock market over the past decade has been the monster growth of the technology sector. Companies within the space are known to be innovative, adopting strategies to disrupt various industries, attract huge user bases,

The Beautiful Chart That Busts 3 Stock Market Myths

My colleagues recently released Morningstar’s quarterly Market Observer report. It’s a tour de force, with sharp analysis of the factors that have driven market performance and given shape to key macro trends. Best of all, it’s studded with lots of excellent charts, like this beauty: What are you looking at? It’s the arc of US

Is Palantir Technologies Still a Millionaire Maker Stock?

Shares have retreated from all-time highs as investors become concerned about the company’s valuation. Palantir Technologies (PLTR +4.79%) was one of the technology industry’s best performers in 2024 and 2025 as investors became optimistic about its decision to incorporate generative artificial intelligence (AI) into its existing data analytics platform. Shares have risen 1,666% over the

3 Ultra-High-Yield Dividend Stocks I’m Still Buying

These dividend stocks are worthy of income investors’ attention. You might have noticed that the stock market has become more volatile lately. Many investors are worried about a potential bubble in AI stocks. There’s uncertainty about what the Federal Reserve will do next. U.S. trade policies could change from one day to the next. These

This AI Stock Could Be One of the Most Valuable in the World by 2027

Alphabet is already one of the most valuable companies in the world, but it’s betting big on being the biggest artificial intelligence (AI) company as well. This isn’t likely to be a particularly controversial take, but right now it looks like Alphabet (GOOG 2.42%) (GOOGL 2.46%), Google’s parent company, is looking like it will emerge as

If You’d Invested $100 in XRP 5 Years Ago, Here’s How Much You’d Have Today

XRP has gained market share in the crypto space over the last half-decade. XRP (XRP 0.01%) has a market capitalization of approximately $96 billion and ranks as the fifth-largest token by valuation. Due to recent sell-offs that have shaped pricing trends across the broader crypto market, XRP is actually down roughly 37% over the last

The Bond Market Is Flashing a Clear Warning About the Fed: 3 Stocks to Buy

The bond market is speaking more loudly than the stock market about the likely direction of the Federal Reserve. What should investors make of President Trump’s nomination of Kevin Warsh to be the next Federal Reserve chair? Don’t look to the stock market for guidance. Instead, focus on the bond market. We’ve seen two things

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x