If you trade or invest in small caps, then watch financials and industrials.
Thats the thought of Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek, who examined in a recent thought piece why have US small caps been struggling this month while the S&P 500 has broken out. His analysis showed that the problem stems from both macro (a recent increase in high yield spreads) and micro (key differences in sector weights) forces.
Nicholas began his observations by looking at the S&P 500, which recently took out the quadruple top of 2800 set in Q4 2018 and March 1st 2019, while US small caps seem to have hit an air pocket. He pointed to one-month return data:
- S&P 600 Small Cap: down 3.2% in the last 30 days
- Russell 2000: down 1.1%
- S&P 500: up 1.9%
- Also worth noting: the S&P 500 is now beating the 600 YTD, up 13.0% versus 12.5%. The Russell is still outperforming the 500, however, up 15.7% on the year.
- While non-investment grade spreads have come in from January to now by 150 basis points (544 bp then, 395 now), they remain 50 bp above levels from most of 2018.
- High yield spreads also took a tick higher in early March, going from 386 bp on the 1st to 418 on the 8th. Current levels are still below the March 1st lows of 386. And it doesnt seem a coincidence that the Russell hit its 2019 high point on March 1st as well…
- You can see the whole chart here: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/BAMLH0A0HYM2
- The Russell has 440 bp greater exposure to Financials than the S&P 500. The Small Cap 600 has 477 bp more exposure.
- Both small cap indices have much heavier weightings in Industrials as well. For the Russell, it is a 507 bp differential. In the Small Cap 600, it is a 931 bp difference.
- Large Cap Financials 1-month return: +0.8%
- Small Cap Financials 1-month return: -4.8%
- Large Cap Industrials 1-month return: -1.6%
- Small Cap Industrials 1-month return: -4.8% (and the worst performing sector in the small cap space over the period.)