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The current environment shares key traits with 1999: a narrow, AI-driven market and extreme valuation gaps between large-growth and small/mid-cap value. This parallel, combined with a backdrop of economic acceleration, suggests a period of significant outperformance for SMID value stocks may be ahead.
A new bull market is underway, with a supportive macro environment and AI-driven efficiency gains expected to fuel a broad-based earnings recovery. This outlook has led strategists to upgrade U.S. small-cap stocks, now preferring them over the large-caps which have dominated recent growth.
The current market's concentration in a few mega-cap stocks has now persisted for a longer duration and with greater narrowness than the infamous tech bubble of the late 1990s. This concentration represents the primary risk in the market, while the broader, neglected market may actually be quite attractive and hold substantially reduced risk.
Historically, small-cap companies grew earnings faster than large-caps, earning a valuation premium. Since the pandemic, this has flipped. Large-caps have seen astronomical earnings growth while small-caps have lagged, creating a rare valuation discount and a potential mean reversion opportunity for investors.
Due to economic distortions from the COVID cycle and data lags from government shutdowns, the Fed is slower than normal to ease policy despite a weakening labor market. This delay has held back the typical market broadening, creating the specific backdrop needed for small caps to outperform large caps for the first time since 2021.
Unlike the dot-com bubble's revenue-less companies, the current AI wave involves companies that can deploy capital and immediately generate revenue. This indicates real value creation and suggests we are in an early, sustainable phase of the cycle, not a speculative peak.
With passive investing dominating and market-wide flows unreliable, investors can no longer wait for multiple expansion. The best small-cap investments are companies actively closing their own valuation gaps through significant buybacks, strategic M&A, or other aggressive, shareholder-aligned capital allocation.
The dominance of passive investing (~65% of the market) and the decline of sell-side research have created a structural inefficiency in small-cap stocks ($500M-$2B). With fewer active managers doing the work, valuations in this segment are extremely attractive, creating significant opportunities for diligent investors.
Following a dovish Fed meeting, the outperformance of small-cap stocks (IWM ETF) versus large-cap tech is the key signal of a healthy, broadening market rally. This indicates capital is flowing beyond mega-cap names into the wider economy, confirming a "game on" sentiment for risk assets.
The current AI market resembles the early, productive phase of the dot-com era, not its speculative peak. Key indicators like reasonable big tech valuations and low leverage suggest a foundational technology shift is underway, contrasting with the market frenzy of the late 90s.
Market-cap weighting turned the S&P 500 into a momentum fund for megacaps, leading to a decade of outperformance versus its equal-weight counterpart—a historical anomaly. Recent signs of equal-weight taking the lead suggest a potential market regime shift back towards value and smaller companies.