Investment Review №338. Change in Direction

Timur Turlov
CEO Freedom Holding Corp.
Small Caps: An Underowned Beneficiary of the Policy Pivot
For the past several years, market leadership has been firmly concentrated in mega-cap technology, particularly the “Magnificent Seven.” Capital, liquidity, and earnings expectations have gravitated toward large-cap growth, leaving small caps structurally underowned. As the rate cycle shifts and the Fed moves closer to easing, that leadership dynamic is beginning to change.
Historically, small caps are more sensitive to monetary easing. The reason is straightforward: funding costs matter more. Roughly two-thirds of small-cap companies carry floating-rate debt, versus closer to one-third in the S&P 500. When rates decline, interest expense falls more quickly for small caps, directly improving margins, free cash flow visibility, and investment capacity.
Price action is already signaling a potential shift in leadership. As enthusiasm for the technology sector fades, capital is beginning to rotate into cheaper, more cyclical segments of the market. Over the past three months, the Russell 2000 has outperformed the Nasdaq Composite by more than 10%, marking one of the strongest relative periods in the last two decades. That kind of spread typically characterizes the early stages of a regime rotation rather than a late-cycle squeeze. Volatility dynamics reinforce the message. The gap between implied volatility in mega-cap tech and small caps has widened toward five-year highs. That divergence reflects rising uncertainty around crowded AI and growth trades, while expectations for small caps appear more stable by comparison. For volatility-targeting and risk-parity strategies, that relative setup increases the appeal of small-cap exposure.
The second pillar of the thesis is valuation. On both P/E and EV/EBITDA, small caps trade at a 30–40% discount to large caps at various points in the cycle. Meanwhile, mega-caps already embed optimistic assumptions around earnings acceleration and capital intensity. In contrast, earnings expectations for small caps have only recently begun to stabilize and turn higher. Importantly, small-cap revenues are more domestically oriented. That reduces FX and geopolitical exposure and positions the group as a more direct beneficiary of a recovery in U.S. demand, particularly in a lower-rate environment and amid ongoing tariff uncertainty.
Small caps remain inherently more volatile. That said, the combination of a clear monetary pivot, early signs of capital rotation, and a historically wide valuation discount versus mega-caps creates a relatively rare window of opportunity. For broad exposure, investors may consider vehicles such as the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) or the Vanguard S&P Small-Cap 600 ETF (VIOO).