Subscribe to our Insights newsletter

Our Insights provide informative, inspiring, surprising, and entertaining insights behind the scenes of finance and economics, as well as society or art. The monthly newsletter keeps you up to date.

 

Investment strategy

European small caps due for a renaissance?

With monetary policy and inflation moving in the right direction, undervalued smaller companies could benefit from a broad-based economic recovery.

Date
Author
Georg Ruzicka, Head Equity Research LGT Private Banking
Reading time
5 minutes

A small mushroom is growing on a tree trunk beneath a much larger one.
Investors should be encouraged by the valuation of European small caps, says Georg Ruzicka of LGT Private Banking. © Shutterstock/SharBano1214

What a tricky investment environment to navigate in these days. While selective US macro data such as the labour market remains surprisingly resilient, the Eurozone has reported a repeated loss of growth momentum lately, which is widening the divergence between the two economies, Add the uncertainties related to the upcoming US elections, the geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and risks of an intensifying trade war with China and you get higher equity volatility as a result. 

Yet, many equity indices recently reached new record-highs, fuelled by the start of a new and globally synchronized interest rate cutting cycle. This backdrop opens new opportunities. In a way, the stars are increasingly aligned for small-cap companies in Europe to catch-up both with their bigger rivals as well as with global small caps. This is because declining inflationary pressures and looser monetary policy create a more favourable backdrop for a catch-up in the performance of smaller businesses.

Several forces are at work here. Supply chain disruption during the COVID-19 crisis disproportionately impacted smaller companies. Large firms were able to use their greater purchasing power to ensure the supply of necessary components. Now that supply chains are running smoothly again, the greater margin pressures felt by small caps has eased. 

Falling inflation helps small caps

An elderly gentleman in a suit and tie, files in hand, strides across a stage on which the American flag is displayed.
US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is "recalibrating" monetary policy. © Keystone/EPA/Jim Lo Scalzo

Equally, smaller businesses, which rely on shorter-term borrowing and tend to have less excess cash put aside, felt the effect of rising refinancing costs faster and more strongly than large corporations did. So with the monetary policy tide turning, they are set to benefit more dramatically from falling interest rates. And that tide looks to have truly turned.

Globally, 26 interest rate cuts were recorded during the month of September, the fourth-highest monthly figure this century, comparable to those in December 2008 (27 cuts) and March 2009 (28 cuts) during the great financial crisis. The expectation is that the ECB will continue to cut rates as inflation falls closer to its 2 % target. 

Stepping back, it's worth noting where we are in the business cycle. While the global economy has so far avoided recession, it still appears to be gradually slowing. Indeed, LGT has recently raised its recession forecast probability from 20 % to 25 % for the Eurozone, while cutting back the recession risk for the US from 25 % to 20 %. 

Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on scepticism, mature on optimism, and die on euphoria.

Sir John Templeton

Close-up of an old man in a suit and tie in front of a billboard.
Sir John Templeton, Anglo-American investor © Keystone/AP Photo/Ed Bailey

So far, the manufacturing PMIs remain largely in contraction territory. However, a recovery in the PMI for the manufacturing sector, even if it takes time to materialize, could act as a positive catalyst for small cap firms and their earnings growth prospects. A potentially successful soft landing of the US economy combined with the latest Chinese stimulus programs may act supportive in this regard over time. History suggests that above-average performance is possible, especially in the first year after the manufacturing PMI bottoms out.  

The well-known investor, Sir John Templeton, said, "Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on scepticism, mature on optimism, and die on euphoria." The current bull market was born out of pandemic pessimism, with phases of great scepticism regarding economic growth and inflation risks accompanying its development.

Based on investor positioning we are somewhere between optimism and euphoria - clearly in a late-cycle environment. This creates ideal conditions for potential rotations in the market, such as in this case from larger to smaller stocks.

Compelling valuations 

In the early phase of pessimism and scepticism, investors tend to position themselves in large cap, higher quality stocks. This trend has been extremely pronounced in this cycle, and we think that the extreme crowding into a narrow market segment has started to fade. Even a slight rotation into small caps, with just 15 % of overall European market capitalisation, could make a big difference. However, should a recession scenario materialize, then history suggests larger and higher quality stocks would be better positioned to navigate through such an environment. 

A man in a suit and tie looks friendly into the camera.
Georg Ruzicka, LGT Private Banking

Fundamentally, however, looking at the European small caps valuation - or undervaluation - should be encouraging for investors. The MSCI Europe Small Caps Index is showing a price-earnings ratio (one of the most common valuation metrics) of roughly 14 times 12-month forward earnings. Over the past 20 years, valuations have only been noticeably more favourable during periods of great turmoil, like the global financial crisis in 2009, the European sovereign debt crisis in 2011, and during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. In retrospect, investing in European small caps would have been worthwhile at each of these times.

Circling back to our introduction, the global economic and geopolitical backdrop obviously remains very complex and challenging, with several risks looming. Such risks could be a pronounced industrial recession, new trade tariffs following the US elections, an escalation in the Middle East accompanied by higher oil prices and a relapse in inflation pressure, which would narrow the room for further rate cuts.

However, with our base case scenario of a US soft landing, abating inflation and more interest rate cuts to come in mind, small caps in Europe look set to benefit from attractive valuations and neglected investor interest. Hence, for risk-tolerant investors, current conditions may offer an opportunity to diversify their equity positions.

A person wearing a neoprene suit, swimming cap and goggles is swimming in open water at sunrise
Investment strategy

Investing in good health and well-being

Why the UN's Sustainable Development Goal No 3 offers a roadmap for corporate growth and profitability.
A person in work clothes in a workshop holds a hammer and ruler on a piece of leather marked 'LV'.
Investment strategy

Europe's healthy "Granolas" stocks

Eleven pharma, tech and luxury stocks, known as the Granolas, are fuelling this year's European stock market surge.
Elderly man in a suit with folders in his hands enters a room with chairs with microphones and a video production room behind
Financial markets

Understanding neutral interest rates

Structural changes in the US and eurozone economies suggest that so-called neutral interest rates may stabilize at higher levels than seen in the past.
Subscribe to Insights