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Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty
Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty

Yahoo

time13-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty

Small-cap stocks are positioned for gains and trading at a discount compared to their large-cap peers, Villere & Co. portfolio manager Sandy Villere tells the Market Domination team. Watch the video above to hear more from Villere about to how play small caps. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination here. Large and mega cap stocks dominating headlines and portfolios alike, but small caps lagging behind. Our next guest, though, says small caps will have their day in the sun. We're navigating how to play small caps with the Yahoo Finance playbook. Joining me now is Sandy Villery, portfolio manager at Villay and Company. Sandy, always good to see you. So you stay here, Sandy, small caps. They're gonna have their day in the sun, better days ahead. How come, Sandy? Walk us through it. Yeah, and I, I, I believe in reversion to the mean. And over the very long run, you take more risk in small cap and you should get more reward. But over the last 10 years, large caps outperformed by about 5% annually. Uh, and even this year, you know, S&P is up about 6%, and, and small is only up about 1%. Um, I just think that from a valuation standpoint, the small caps are about a 23% discount. A large gap. And when you look at the top 10 stocks in the S&P 500, they're trading about 29.3 times. The other 490 stocks are trading about 20 times. So we think they will have their day in the sun. And, uh, another interesting thing is when you go back over the last 100 years and you look at the cap ratio, the cyclically adjusted PE on the S&P, uh, there's only 5 times in history, and we're there now where we've hit these levels. Um, one was in '99 before the market cracked in 2000. Uh, you have to go forward to '07 before it cracked in '08. And then again in 2021, before we had that down, uh, 30% year in 22. And then again, uh, at the end of '24, when we did see, uh, about a 20% pullback, uh, into liberation day before we V-shaped from there. So we just think valuation is why small caps look so attractive. So Amy, I want to get you in here because, so Sandy says, listen, small caps are gonna have their day in the sun, Amy, what do you see? Yeah, I would say this is a key question for investors we talked to because small caps, you know, for traders, it's not necessarily just about fundamentals, it's about how they bake into factors. So when you think about small caps, We use IWM as a proxy. What is this idea of when we're going to get the rotation from, uh, growth into value or from value, you know, from momentum which had been outperforming, you're starting to see signs of that, but two major indicators I'd look at, one is how much call volume demand you see in IWM, which again is that proxy for small caps, and two, if you see a sustained reversion in that rotation between small cap with IWM as the proxy and QQQ as the growth factor. Sandy, what would happen? You know, there are some smart economists out there, smart strategists. I've heard them, listen, they, they don't think the Fed cuts this year. Economy is resilient, inflation's sticky. What if Jay Powell sits on his hands? Play that out for me. What would that mean for small caps? Yeah, that's gonna be a tougher environment, and that's what we're in now. We've had the, the dollar fall 11% year to date, not good for small caps, and, and interest rates have been stubbornly high. So we, we need to see, you know, kind of some, probably the job market fall apart a little bit, um, and we need to see rates come down for, for small caps to finally get the, the wind in their back. Um, but again, uh, we just need a rotation and sentiment from large cap growth to value or small cap, and I, I think that could also, uh, play out even if rates kind of stay, stay, uh, flat. Sandy, let's get some names here cause I always like to get your picks. Uh, Caesars, let's start there. Why is that one to buy? As you know, stocks meant left for dead. You say though, this is an opportunity. Yeah, I mean, you're down 36% off the high. You're now trading at 7.5 times enterprise value to EBITDA. If you look at 2026 numbers, this is a 17% free cash flow yield. The stock is baking in a recession and, and it, it, it is exposed to the consumer, which is not maybe a great spot to be, and they do have leverage. Every 100 basis points, uh, cut, uh, by the Fed would be about $60 million in free cash flow added to Caesars. So I just think it's so cheap. Uh, and, and, uh, the worst is expected that, um, it's a nice time to be picking it up when. When everybody else hates it. All right. From Caesars to a biotech, walk me through this one. Lagan, that's ticker LGND. Yeah, Lagan is really a, a chicken way to play the biotech industry. So they've got many, many shots on goal, as opposed to a typical biotech investment that can be a real binary outcome. Just on July 1st, to kind of give you an example, they helped put a merger together with Channel Therapeutics and Pelthos Therapeutics, and they invested about 18 million out of 50 million. This is a molluscum drug that impacts about 16.7 million people, and now you can actually take it at home instead of having to go to the doctor's office. They're gonna get a 13% royalty on that. And then just one more, Merck bought Verona this morning, as you all know, for $10 billion. They also have a mid single-digit royalty on their COPD drug for progressive lung disease. So that's just two examples with their 90 different programs and 13 different royalty commercial royalty streams right now. So we like that one a lot. Final, I just want to squeeze this one in, Sandy. Option Care, ticker OPCH, which has had a nice bit of run here. I'm looking it up about 30% this year. You say there's some some potential headwinds, but it's a buy, Sandy. Yeah, it is. I think I could see this trading from about 13 times enterprise value to EBITA, about 15 times. This is home therapy treatments, and so I think a lot of people like these home infusions. It's much cheaper, about 50% cheaper than doing it in a hospital. It's much more comfortable for the consumer, and I don't think any of these things as more and more people turn 65 and older, I don't think this is going away anytime soon. So we think it's got a good, a good future.

Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty
Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty

Yahoo

time12-07-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Top 3 small-cap stock picks while navigating trade uncertainty

Small-cap stocks are positioned for gains and trading at a discount compared to their large-cap peers, Villere & Co. portfolio manager Sandy Villere tells the Market Domination team. Watch the video above to hear more from Villere about to how play small caps. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination here. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Wall Street ends mostly flat in choppy trade as Treasury yields ease
Wall Street ends mostly flat in choppy trade as Treasury yields ease

Free Malaysia Today

time22-05-2025

  • Business
  • Free Malaysia Today

Wall Street ends mostly flat in choppy trade as Treasury yields ease

The benchmark US 10-year note yield fell 5.4 basis points to 4.543% after hitting its highest since February. (AP pic) NEW YORK : US stocks closed a choppy session little changed on Thursday, erasing initial declines as Treasury yields eased off recent highs after the House of Representatives passed US President Donald Trump's tax and spending bill. Recent concerns about the US deficit have pushed up Treasury yields and pressured stocks, but longer-dated yields fell on Thursday, allowing stocks to take a breather. The benchmark US 10-year note yield fell 5.4 basis points to 4.543% after hitting its highest since February. The benchmark S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average ended flat, while the Nasdaq edged higher. All three major Wall Street indexes had posted their biggest single-day percentage drops in a month on Wednesday as Treasury yields spiked on US debt worries. The Republican-controlled House voted by a slim margin to pass the bill, which would fulfill many of Trump's campaign pledges to his political base, but will increase the US$36.2 trillion US debt pile by US$3.8 trillion over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office. Investors are also weighing the impact of Trump's tariffs on US imports, including on consumer prices. 'The problem today was the tax bill, which appears to have passed,' said George Young, partner and portfolio manager at Villere & Co in New Orleans. 'But we are thinking about bigger potential problems and the two main things on the table are tariffs and interest rates.' 'The market hates uncertainty and we've still got this overhang of the tariffs and the bond market, which is totally apolitical and totally international,' Young added. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell just 1.35 points to 41,859.09, the S&P 500 lost merely 2.60 points or 0.04% at 5,842.01 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 53.09 points, or 0.28%, at 18,925.74. Eight out of 11 S&P 500 subsectors finished lower, led by utilities, healthcare, energy and consumer staples stocks. Consumer discretionary, communication services and technology stocks advanced. Megacap growth stocks, including Nvidia, Amazon and Tesla, gained. Alphabet was 1.3% firmer after touching a nearly three-month high. Apple ended down 0.36%. Snowflake jumped more than 13% after the cloud computing firm raised its fiscal 2026 product revenue forecast. Analog Devices fell 4.6% despite the semiconductor manufacturer beating Wall Street estimates for quarterly results. Shares of solar energy companies including First Solar dropped as Trump's tax bill is expected to end a number of green-energy subsidies. First Solar finished down 4.3%. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.17-to-1 ratio on the NYSE. There were 68 new highs and 99 new lows on the NYSE. The S&P 500 posted four new 52-week highs and nine new lows while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 49 new highs and 109 new lows. Volume on US exchanges was 16.09 billion shares, compared with the 17.56 billion average for the full session over the last 20 trading days.

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