Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Small caps offer big returns for the canny investor

- Tim Boreham Criterion

Small caps have significan­tly underperfo­rmed their larger brethren since the pandemicer­a stimulus taps were turned off, leaving many of them struggling for funds.

That’s good news as well, because history shows this situation will not last. The last time the sector did worse was in 1938. Post-war, the small caps have outperform­ed the large caps many times over.

ANZ Private Bank portfolio manager Samantha Chien concurs: “small caps are the first to pop when there is any indication of stronger economic conditions”.

While all companies are vulnerable to interest rates, inflation and softening consumer demand, small caps are more so because of their weaker balance sheets, lack of access to debt capital and greater exposure to the domestic economy.

Chris Chen, with American Century Investment­s, notes that “small caps have had a rough couple of years”. “But inflation appears to be coming off,” he says. “Growth is not out of the woods but the risk of a hard landing appears to be lower than 12 months ago.”

OK – the macro picture is supportive. But how do investors pick a winner, such as Us-oriented family security mob Life 360 (360), which has doubled in value over the past year? Or how about buy-nowpay-later Lazarus stock Zipco ( ZIP), which has tripled in value? The gurus suggest a starting point of companies with a decent balance sheet and solid earnings. If they are not making money, they should have the potential to be a disruptive force in their sector and should not trade on excessive blue-sky valuations.

“We want quality balance sheets and management but … we also want earnings accelerati­on,” Chen says.

Drummond Capital Partners’ Nick Shoenmaker says investors have been led to believe that the megacaps – especially the US tech leaders – are forever onwards and upwards. While the US “Magnificen­t Seven” tech stocks have ridden the AI boom, the small caps need not miss out with opportunit­ies in related sectors such as data centres, software-as-a-service, 5G, cybersecur­ity providers and energy infrastruc­ture.

Meanwhile, non-ai “megatrends” include defence, real estate, critical minerals and tourism. Scarce analyst coverage opens an opportunit­y for active stock pickers to trawl the small caps scarcely covered by analysts and prone to mispricing (accentuate­d by low liquidity).

Given this lack of scrutiny, the upcoming domestic profitrepo­rting season has the capacity to produce surprises – with those conveying the nasty ones tending to lob last-minute accounts.

RBC Capital Markets expects decent numbers from ZIP (post a balance sheet repair job) and Siteminder ( SDR), a portal for hotels to fill vacant rooms. The firm also likes online retailer Temple &

Webster ( TPW). Given that several retailers including Universal Store ( UNI) have pointed to better times, we would pay special attention to marked-down merchants such as Kogan ( KGN), Super Retail Group ( SUL), Dusk Group ( DSK) and – for the brave – City Chic Collective ( CCX) and Cettire ( CTT). Of course, many small caps are small for a reason. Then again, many large caps used to be small ‘uns and the average value of the sector is increasing.

This story does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independen­t advice before making any financial decision

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