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This website has been carefully prepared by Robeco. The information contained in this publication is based upon sources of information believed to be reliable. Robeco is not answerable for the accuracy or completeness of the facts, opinions, expectations and results referred to therein. Whilst every care has been taken in the preparation of this website, we do not accept any responsibility for damage of any kind resulting from incorrect or incomplete information. This website is subject to change without notice. The value of the investments may fluctuate. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. If the currency in which the past performance is displayed differs from the currency of the country in which you reside, then you should be aware that due to exchange rate fluctuations the performance shown may increase or decrease if converted into your local currency. For investment professional use only. Not for use by the general public.

I Disagree

12-11-2023 · Monthly outlook

Finding diamonds in the rough

Marilyn Monroe once famously sang that “diamonds are a girl’s best friend” – but do they hold the same allure as a metaphor for stocks? Looking for hidden gems among small caps rather than fixating on the crown jewels in mega caps may well allow investors to beat the market next year, says strategist Peter van der Welle.

    Authors

  • Peter van der Welle - Strategist Sustainable Multi Asset Solutions

    Peter van der Welle

    Strategist Sustainable Multi Asset Solutions

Summary

  1. Markets still follow the ‘soft landing’ narrative even though they’re usually wrong

  2. Small caps may have already discounted the mild recession we predict for 2024

  3. Looking for hidden gems likely to uncover more value than the ‘Magnificent Seven’

Stock markets are still expecting a soft landing for the global economy in 2024, but they have never been a good indicator for the likelihood of recessions. Still, equity investors can only invest in companies and not trend lines, whether their predictive power is good or not. Finding the stocks that can outperform the others during rough times remains the art of active management.

But it may well be time to reconsider the Magnificent Seven of mega-cap tech stocks that have dominated returns in the S&P 500 for several years, and look instead for the diamonds that lay somewhere in the smaller-cap Russell 2000, says Van der Welle, strategist with Robeco Sustainable Multi-Asset Solutions.

“The imperfect predictive powers of the stock market with regard to economic downturns tend to generate more false positives than false negatives,” he says. “Nobel laureate Paul Samuelson quipped in 1966 that ‘Wall Street indices predicted nine out of the last five recessions’. Risk aversion still rules the cycle.”

“Yet, could the market this time err on the side of negligence? While soft landings for the global economy are the exception rather than the rule, the latest Bank of America Merril Lynch survey shows 75% of asset managers expects a soft landing to materialize in 2024.”

“Stock markets have embraced this soft landing narrative, and all the more so in November after the October (core) US inflation numbers seemingly confirmed the Fed is on the path to achieve its 2% inflation target without tanking the economy.”

Large caps still leading

This optimism has been reflected by a stock market rally in 2023, though much has been led by the bullish sentiment embodied by the large-cap tech stocks, rather than the smaller-cap companies that may be giving a better reading of the underlying economy.

“The S&P 500 index is up 21% for the year, and short-term momentum is exceptionally strong,” Van der Welle says. “The typical equity market sell-off in the three to six months prior to the onset of a recession is nowhere to be seen.”

“Still, while the broad equity indices are all trending up in the year to date, the relative performance of small versus large caps reveals significant bearish undertones. This suggests that parts of the equity market may have already been anticipating an economic downturn after all.”

“In contrast to large caps, we think that small caps – more specifically the Russell 2000 – have by and large already discounted the mild recession that we in the multi-asset team do anticipate in 2024.”

“Sure, not all of its constituents are exactly diamonds, since around 40% of Russell 2000 companies are loss-making. Investors willing to weed through the rough could pick up some gems nonetheless.”

Peak-to-trough performances

The technicals in the stock market bear this out. The historical relative performance of the Russell 2000 currently almost matches the average peak-to-trough relative performance of the S&P 500 prior to the onset of a recession as defined by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER).

The Russell 2000 has lagged the S&P 500 by 29% since its cyclical peak in March 2021, when the typical recessionary peak-to-trough lag is 31%. This implies that the Russell 2000 has discounted 93% of the recession risk.

“Of course, history may not rhyme, as index ratios are not a stationary time series, since fundamental shifts in the economic structure may have caused structural breaks,” Van der Welle says. “For instance, small caps could face additional downside relative to large caps in a persistent above-target central bank inflation regime, where large-cap firms with the highest pricing power continue to take it all.”

A major inflection point

Another observation is that the Russell 2000 tends to outperform the S&P 500 after the trough of an NBER recession. “If our mild recession call in 2024 proves to be correct, next year could see a major inflection point, as the Russell 2000 has seen an average outperformance of 10% in the 200 trading days following a US recession trough,” Van der Welle says.

finding-diamonds-in-the-rough.jpg

The S&P500 versus Russell 2000 performance around NBER recession troughs. Source: LSEG Datastream, Robeco

“This is corroborated by looking at data from the four phases of the business cycle: recovery, expansion, slowdown and recession. Data since 1988 confirms that during the recession and recovery signals, the S&P 500 typically lost ground to the Russell 2000.”

“The S&P 500 lost on average 0.2% on a monthly basis against the Russell 2000 when our business cycle monitor signaled recession. Applying the same analysis to the MSCI small caps 1750 index versus the MSCI large cap 300 index yields similar results.”

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Not so Magnificent Seven?

So, should investors stick with the ’Magnificent Seven’ – Alphabet (Google), Amazon, Apple, Meta Platforms (Facebook), Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla – for another year? Or look for opportunities in more unloved territory?

“We believe that small caps are well into the apathy phase of the investment sentiment cycle in the US and elsewhere,” Van der Welle says.

“Investors have flocked to the Magnificent Seven, though investors that have fundamental and active strategies will uncover some gems in small caps. While there could be additional relative downside for the Russell 2000 in the near term, we believe a mild US recession in 2024 could deliver an inflection point.”

Read the full monthly outlook here


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Important information
The Robeco Capital Growth Funds have not been registered under the United States Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, nor or the United States Securities Act of 1933, as amended. None of the shares may be offered or sold, directly or indirectly in the United States or to any U.S. Person (within the meaning of Regulation S promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”)). Furthermore, Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (Robeco) does not provide investment advisory services, or hold itself out as providing investment advisory services, in the United States or to any U.S. Person (within the meaning of Regulation S promulgated under the Securities Act).
This website is intended for use only by non-U.S. Persons outside of the United States (within the meaning of Regulation S promulgated under the Securities Act who are professional investors, or professional fiduciaries representing such non-U.S. Person investors. By clicking “I Agree” on our website disclaimer and accessing the information on this website, including any subdomain thereof, you are certifying and agreeing to the following: (i) you have read, understood and agree to this disclaimer, (ii) you have informed yourself of any applicable legal restrictions and represent that by accessing the information contained on this website, you are not in violation of, and will not be causing Robeco or any of its affiliated entities or issuers to violate, any applicable laws and, as a result, you are legally authorized to access such information on behalf of yourself and any underlying investment advisory client, (iii) you understand and acknowledge that certain information presented herein relates to securities that have not been registered under the Securities Act, and may be offered or sold only outside the United States and only to, or for the account or benefit of, non-U.S. Persons (within the meaning of Regulation S under the Securities Act), (iv) you are, or are a discretionary investment adviser representing, a non-U.S. Person (within the meaning of Regulation S under the Securities Act) located outside of the United States and (v) you are, or are a discretionary investment adviser representing, a professional non-retail investor.


Access to this website has been limited so that it shall not constitute directed selling efforts (as defined in Regulation S under the Securities Act) in the United States and so that it shall not be deemed to constitute Robeco holding itself out generally to the public in the U.S. as an investment adviser. Nothing contained herein constitutes an offer to sell securities or solicitation of an offer to purchase any securities in any jurisdiction. We reserve the right to deny access to any visitor, including, but not limited to, those visitors with IP addresses residing in the United States. This website has been carefully prepared by Robeco. The information contained in this publication is based upon sources of information believed to be reliable. Robeco is not answerable for the accuracy or completeness of the facts, opinions, expectations and results referred to therein. Whilst every care has been taken in the preparation of this website, we do not accept any responsibility for damage of any kind resulting from incorrect or incomplete information. This website is subject to change without notice. The value of the investments may fluctuate. Past performance is no guarantee of future results. If the currency in which the past performance is displayed differs from the currency of the country in which you reside, then you should be aware that due to exchange rate fluctuations the performance shown may increase or decrease if converted into your local currency. For investment professional use only. Not for use by the general public.