NewsBite

Stockhead: ASX small cap rollercoaster well worth the ride

They’re called small cap stocks, but many are big deals – and can deliver big rewards. Here’s what you have to know about this exciting world.

Small cap stocks can provide an exciting ride. Picture: istock
Small cap stocks can provide an exciting ride. Picture: istock

The share market rollercoaster is taking all investors on a white-knuckled ride, but none more so than those exposed to the minnow end of the bourse.

Small cap stocks tend to suffer more than their grown-up cousins because they have weaker balance sheets and lower liquidity, which means that it only takes low volumes of selling to depress the share price.

Small caps are also likely to be speculative – such as resources explorers and biotechs – with only an outside chance of developing a mine or a product.

They also tend to be poorly researched by brokers and fund managers, although this can be a good thing, as hidden gems can be overlooked.

For the latest crypto news and views, sign up here for free Stockhead daily newsletters

When investors become risk-averse, equity funding dries up and most of these players would struggle to get within a pinstriped banker’s brolly length of a loan (at least they’re not troubled by soaring interest rates).

In the year to date, the ASX small ordinaries index has retreated 16 per cent, while the top 200 stocks have fallen by 7 per cent.

Most small caps are growth stocks – code for little revenue or earnings but big prospects – and the growth sector generally has been shunned by now-risk-averse investors.

So why bother with the tiddlers? For a start, the “small caps” are not necessarily small – many of them have market valuations in the billions.

So-called micro caps are valued below around $500m, while nano caps are in a speculative league of their own, with market caps from $50m-ish to a couple of silver coins you would throw at a tuneless busker.

While small caps are sold off faster than the larger stocks, the corollary is that they can do better in a recovery – sometimes much better.

Supplied Money BetaShares chief economist David Bassanese
Supplied Money BetaShares chief economist David Bassanese

BetaShares chief economist David Bassanese says playing the small caps is not so much a matter of picking the hidden gems, but avoiding the bad ones.

The latter can be weeded out by excluding those with too much debt, that are loss-makers or are running out of cash.

Encouragingly, the small caps outperformed the broader market during the recovery periods of the pandemic and the global financial crisis – sometimes spectacularly so.

Past rewards for emboldened investors include the buy-now-pay-later hero Afterpay, which emerged from obscurity and was taken over this year by US fintech Square for $39bn (it remains ASX listed as Block Inc, under the code SQ2).

Visit The Australian’s Stockhead page, where ASX small caps are big deals

Fortescue Mining (ASX:FMG, market cap $58bn) and Domino’s Pizza Enterprises (ASX:DMP, $6bn) also evolved from the small-caps mire.

For those unwilling to pick individual winners, exchange traded funds or other collective vehicles can be a handy way to spread risk across multiple stocks.

The BetaShares Australian Small Companies Select Fund (SMLL) invests in 50 to 100 tailored small caps and its 6 per cent one-year return to the end of April was double that of the small ordinaries accumulation index.

Fund manager Ausbil’s Australian small cap fund surfs energy transition stocks such as Core Lithium (ASX:CXO) and copper-gold hopeful 29 Metals (ASX:29M); and inflation resistant stocks such as fruit and vegie grower Costa Group (ASX:CGC) and health insurer NIB Holdings (ASX:NHF).

Building group Johns Lyng (ASX:JLG) – a fixer-upper of buildings after floods and other tempests – is an alternative exposure to the climate change theme.

In the year to March the Ausbil fund had returned 29 per cent, compared with just under 10 per cent for the small caps index.

But as they say in the super funds ads, past dazzling performance does not guarantee future glowing returns.

And if pain persists, sack your broker.

This story does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independent advice before making any financial decisions

For more from Tim Boreham, go to stockhead.com.au

SUBSCRIBE

Get the latest Stockhead news delivered free to your inbox. Click here

Read related topics:ASX
Tim Boreham

Tim is one of Australia’s best-known small-cap share analysts and business journalists. He has more than 30 years of experience writing for major business publications. He is known for the highly-respected Criterion investment column which ran for many years in The Australian.

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/business/stockhead/stockhead-asx-small-cap-rollercoaster-well-worth-the-ride/news-story/42392215d8fe25e61a0082c9fe262841