Country Small-Cap ETFs

Small-caps in the US have been extreme laggards compared to large-caps over the last couple of years, but what about small-caps in other countries?  Below is a look at the price change (%) of seven small-cap country ETFs since February 2012 (the first point in which all seven were available).

The Russell 2,000 small-cap US ETF (IWM) is up 159.9% over these 12+ years, and only India small-caps (SMIN) have done better with a gain of 222.8%.  India small-caps only recently took the lead on the US with a big jump higher over the last 18 months or so.

Small-caps in other countries have been poor options for US investors relative to owning something like the S&P 500 ETF (SPY).  The Europe small-cap (IEUS) and Japan small-cap (SCJ) ETFs are up 68.2% and 63.9%, respectively, since February 2012, while the UK small-cap ETF (EWUS) is up 38.8%.

Small-cap ETFs for China (ECNS) and Brazil (EWZS) are flat-out negative over this extended 12+ year time frame with China down 41% and Brazil down 50%.

If you’ve been lamenting the lagging performance of US small-caps, it could have been worse!

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/20/24 – 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8…

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup. Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day. Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.

“Capitalism does live by crises and booms, just as a human being lives by inhaling and exhaling.” – Leon Trotsky

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

There’s no data on the economic calendar today, and there wasn’t a lot in the way of earnings reports overnight or this morning, and that has resulted in a relatively quiet (but slightly positive) tone in equity futures. Likewise, crude oil and treasury yields have seen little movement.  The most exciting area of financial markets this morning could be in the gold and crypto markets where bullion is well over $2,500 per ounce and bitcoin is trading back above $60K.

Overnight in Asia, equity indices were all over the place with Japan up nearly 2% and China down about 1%. In China, the PBoC left 1 and 5-year prime rates unchanged. European stocks have seen little movement as the STOXX 600 is little changed as July CPI came in unchanged on a m/m basis which was right in line with forecasts. On the interest rate picture, ECB member Olli Rehn was on the wires saying that risks to the growth outlook have raised the odds of a rate cut in September.

Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq composite have finished the day higher for eight straight days now, and if the current level of the futures holds, the streak for both indices will extend to a 9th straight day today. Since its inception in 1971, the Nasdaq composite has now had 89 different streaks of eight or more daily gains in a row which works out to about three streaks every two years. For the S&P 500, these streaks have been much less common with just 30 since 1971 or about one every two years.  Concurrent streaks of eight or more days in a row have been even less common with just 15 since 1971, or about one every four years.

The charts of the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq below (both on a log scale) show where every concurrent streak of eight or more days of gains occurred, and while the average works out to about one every four years, they haven’t been evenly distributed. The current streak is the second in less than a year and the third in less than three years.  Before that, the prior two were about four years apart (2017 and then 2013), but before the 2013 streak, there were more than 21 years without a single occurrence and that included the late 1990s dot-com bubble- a period that people look back on as thinking the market did nothing but go up! In last night’s Closer report, we included an analysis of the performance of both indices following those prior streaks, and performance was mixed with forward returns that were generally weaker than the average forward returns for all periods since 1971.

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Yen Stalls After Historic Rally

While the moves in US equities in recent weeks have been extreme, the currency markets have been even crazier, especially in the Japanese yen.  In early July, the yen was trading at its weakest levels in over 30 years (higher values in the chart below), and shorting the yen was ‘easy money”.  Those rumors of the yen’s death proved to be exaggerated. Just like that, the decline in the yen stalled out, unleashing a stampede of shorts looking to cover causing one of the most extreme movements in the currency ever recorded. From its weakest point in early July to early August, the yen rallied a practically unheard-of 10%+.  While the rally stalled in the short term, the USD/JPY cross remains down nearly 10% from its peak in early July.

To illustrate the gravity of this move, the chart below shows the rolling five-week (25-trading day) change in the USDJPY cross going back to the early 1970s. The current move ranks as the most extreme since the Financial Crisis and before that the Russian Debt default in 1998.  While the recent chaos in the currency markets reverberated throughout financial markets, including equities, so far at least, the impact this time around has been downright tame relative to the two most recent periods of similar volatility.

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Alphabet (GOOGL) Turns Twenty

Twenty years ago to the day, the company running the world’s largest search engine went public. On August 19th, 2004, Alphabet (GOOGL) shares IPO’d at a split-adjusted price of $2.13.  In the 20 years since, the stock has been a top performer in many aspects.  Simply looking at the top line, revenues have exploded from $512 million in Q4 2003 to $84.7 billion in the latest quarter.  Given its rise to become one of the six “trillion dollar market cap” companies, the stock has ripped higher an astounding 7,669% from its IPO price.

So how has Alphabet done in the 20 years since it went public versus other big winners in the stock market?  Below is a look at the 30 stocks currently in the S&P 500 that are up the most over the last 20 years.  As shown, these 30 names are all up more than 3,000% since GOOGL’s IPO, and GOOGL ranks as the 11th best.  Unsurprisingly, the single best stock by a huge margin is NVIDIA (NVDA) with a gaudy 127,418% gain, but other mega-caps like Apple (AAPL) and Amazon (AMZN) have both put up better numbers than GOOGL as well.  Additional names that have done better than GOOGL include Netflix (NFLX) with a 30,000%+ gain, Monster Beverage (MNST), Booking Holdings (BKNG), Intuitive Surgical (ISRG), Regeneron (REGN), Deckers Outdoor (DECK), and Salesforce (CRM).

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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 8/19/24 – Lucky Sevens

See what’s driving market performance around the world in today’s Morning Lineup. Bespoke’s Morning Lineup is the best way to start your trading day. Read it now by starting a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium.  CLICK HERE to learn more and start your trial.

“We’re using modern technology to revert to primitive kinds of human relations.” – Bill Clinton

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

It’s late August, so it shouldn’t come as a surprise that the market tone is quiet to start the week, especially with earnings season winding down. The only report on the calendar this morning is leading Indicators at 10 AM, and for the rest of the week, the only other notable reports are initial claims (Thursday), new (Friday) and existing (Thursday) home sales, and flash PMI readings (Thursday) from S&P being the only other reports to look forward to. Besides these data points, though, the market will also be focused on Wednesday’s Fed Minutes, benchmark revisions to Non-Farm Payrolls, and Fed Chair Powell’s speech from Jackson Hole on Friday.

Overnight in Asia, Japan was down over 2% as the yen strengthened, and in Europe, the STOXX 600 is looking at modest gains of around 0.3%.

The week looks to be getting off to a quiet start, but if the S&P 500 can finish higher today it will stretch the current streak of daily gains to eight. That would be the longest winning streak since last November and tied with six other periods for the longest winning streak since 2009. At seven days now through last Friday, the current streak ranks as the 16th streak of seven or more days, and each of those streaks is indicated with red dots in the chart below. Four of the prior 7-day streaks occurred in 2013, another three were in 2017, and another five were clustered during the post-Covid bull market.

In today’s Morning Lineup, we looked at how the S&P 500 performed in the week and month following seven-day winning streaks since the Financial Crisis. To see the results of that analysis, sign up for a trial today.

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Brunch Reads – 8/18/24

Welcome to Bespoke Brunch Reads — a linkfest of the favorite things we read over the past week. The links are mostly market-related, but there are some other interesting subjects covered as well. We hope you enjoy the food for thought as a supplement to the research we provide you during the week.

The Right to Vote: It’s an election year, and on this day in 1920, the 19th Amendment was ratified, granting American women the right to vote. The vote hinged on a single vote where 24-year-old Harry Burn, a member of the House of Representatives from Tennessee, had initially opposed but changed his vote after receiving a letter from his mother urging him to support suffrage. It was a monumental victory for the women’s suffrage movement led by figures like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Also, it set the stage for the continued advancement of women’s rights in the US.

AI & Technology

Here’s how people are actually using AI (MIT Technology Review)
AI is all around us now, whether we like it or not, and many of us are using it for different purposes and in different ways. Productivity may have been the name of the game to begin with, but the use of the new technology has gotten much more personal for many people. Meta Platforms CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been bullish on AI agents and assistants for quite some time now but maybe we’re already taking it a step further in using AI for companionship. The anticipated “killer apps” have yet to emerge, and its limitations leave plenty of room for error, so it’s still difficult to bet on the shape, or shapes, AI will solidify itself. [Link]

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