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“Too many people miss the silver lining because they’re expecting gold.” – Maurice Sendak

Morning stock market summary

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We’re not sure if it’s the summer doldrums setting in early or that investors needed a breather after the craziness of the last several months, but for the second morning in a row, the action in futures has been quiet. This morning, S&P 500 futures have been moving on either side of the unchanged line while the Nasdaq is set to open slightly higher.

US and Chinese officials are in London again this morning for the second day of trade talks, and the economic calendar is quiet with NFIB Small Business Sentiment being today’s only report. That came in better than expected, rising from 95.8 to 98.8 in May. Overnight, in Asia, Australia and Japan were higher while Hong Kong and China declined.

When it comes to the mega-cap stocks in the S&P 500 with market caps of more than or around a trillion dollars, an increasingly evident trend is that the group no longer trades as a block, where each member’s performance is no longer in line with the others. This can be seen in the year-to-date performance of the nine stocks listed below. While the average performance of the nine stocks on a YTD basis is basically unchanged (-0.01%) and the median is a gain of 5.37%, the performance of each stock ranges from 18.5% (Meta Platforms-META) to a decline of 23.6% (Tesla–TSLA). Even over the last 12 months, while all nine stocks have experienced positive returns, the magnitude of the gains ranges from 4.3% for Apple (AAPL) to a gain of 69.6% for Broadcom (AVGO). Even with every stock trading higher, they have hardly traded in unison.

Where we have seen a group of stocks trade much more in unison is at the other end of the market cap scale. The table below shows the nine stocks in the S&P 500 with the smallest market caps and how each has performed YTD and over the last 12 months. On a YTD basis, all nine stocks are lower with an average decline of 20.7% (median: -19.35). Just as notable is that the range of returns has been much closer than the largest stocks in the S&P 500. Whereas more than 42 percentage points separates the best and worst performances of the nine largest stocks in the S&P 500, for the nine stocks with the smallest market caps, the spread is just 23 percentage points. So, while the rising tide hasn’t impacted each of the nine largest stocks equally, the nine smallest stocks have been weighed down by a more similar anchor.

In terms of performance, while there may have been some concerns over the performance of the mega-cap stocks in recent months, they’re still doing much better than the nine smallest stocks.

Even on a relative strength basis, the nine stocks with the smallest market caps in the S&P 500 have consistently underperformed. Earlier this month, they even made a new low relative to the mega caps.