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In focus: Brighter outlook for undervalued small caps

Small-capitalization (small-cap) stocks may be entering a more favorable environment in the second half of 2024 and beyond. With their valuations already at the lowest levels versus big caps since the early 2000s, small caps may benefit from the potential start of the interest-rate easing cycle in the United States and Europe. Fundamentally, small caps may see accelerated earnings growth amid a resilient global economy, while merger and acquisition (M&A) activities may provide another positive catalyst.

Investment outlook

In North America, the environment for stockpickers has not been ideal, as a handful of names have made up the bulk of the market’s performance. Limited exposure to rallying US mega-cap tech stocks continued to be a major headwind for our global equity strategies. We do not own many of these stocks based on valuation grounds. However, we do have exposure to the AI theme through investments in semiconductor companies that are integral to the development of AI.

In Asia Pacific, July markets were volatile as investors digested corporate earnings, the evolving interest rate outlook and geopolitical news flow. We see the same uncertainties potentially affecting the Asian market in the second half (2H) of 2024, even as regional earnings are on the cusp of recovery. In Asia, market consensus is calling for an 11% second-quarter earnings growth in Asia ex Japan, 4% in Japan and 9% in China.1 While these growth numbers reflect in part the low base in 2023, regional earnings appear to be bottoming out. For the full year of 2024, earnings appear likely to grow 27% in Asia ex Japan, up from the 4% decline in 2023.2

In Europe, the opportunity set we identified at the end of 2023 and the first quarter (1Q) of 2024 remains largely unchanged: SMID companies, UK investments, relative value in staples/utilities, some verticals of undervalued cyclicals (including real estate, construction and IT services). In our view, many of these pockets should be beneficiaries of declining interest rates.

Market review: July 2024

Global equities collectively rose in July 2024. As measured by MSCI indexes in US-dollar terms, developed and frontier market equities outpaced the global MSCI ACWI benchmark, while emerging market equities trailed it. Global value stocks significantly outperformed global growth stocks, which generally declined.

Stocks gained in July despite heightened volatility that included a rotation away from large-cap technology-related stocks worldwide—especially those focused on AI. Cooler-than-expected inflation and a softening job market in the United States increased investor expectations for interest-rate cuts, leading to a preference for small-cap stocks, rate-sensitive equities and more cyclical areas of the market. Global manufacturing activity contracted in July for the first time in 2024, while flash reports for July indicated services activity expanded across regions.



IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION

This material is intended to be of general interest only and should not be construed as individual investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell or hold any security or to adopt any investment strategy. All investments involve risks, including possible loss of principal. There is no guarantee that a strategy will meet its objective. Performance may also be affected by currency fluctuations. Reduced liquidity may have a negative impact on the price of the assets. Currency fluctuations may affect the value of overseas investments. Where a strategy invests in emerging markets, the risks can be greater than in developed markets. Where a strategy invests in derivative instruments, this entails specific risks that may increase the risk profile of the strategy. Where a strategy invests in a specific sector or geographical area, the returns may be more volatile than a more diversified strategy.

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