Mutual Funds for the Utterly Confused: Small Cap Investment Risk
Two, they rely on private investors and issue stocks, usually in large blocks to these groups making the pool of available stocks small (generally not available but sometimes counted as if it were).
Three, many of the shares available are not really for sale but are listed as such, held by company executives (yet another block of stocks).
Four, no index can buy all of the small-caps listed on the popular indexes such as the Russell 2000 (some are just too small).
That creates risk.
Each time a fund looks to buy small company stocks, it runs the risk of increasing the share value simply because they purchased it. No real growth speculation has taken place in the markets and that makes the share price for very small and largely inactive companies to get a share price increase they do not deserve. Generally, only about 850 companies in the Russell 2000 index are considered invest-able.
But when we have market downturns, the border between what is small-cap and what is mid-cap blurs. Defining capitalization is relatively standard although not without some leeway. To determine a companies capitalization, multiply the outstanding number of shares by the price of the share. Generally, they fall into one category in a stable market.
- Mega Cap: $200+ billion
- Big/Large Cap: $10 - 200 billion
- Mid Cap: $2 - $10 billion
- Small Cap: $300 million - $2 billion
- Micro Cap: $50 - $300 million
- Nano Cap: <$50 million
But these are not stable markets and some formally well-capitalized companies have slipped making what see as a unique opportunity to own businesses that will regain their footing eventually and break-out of their fall from a previous cap-group.
That’s not to say that there will not be less risk. Many of these smaller companies have unique and often difficult financial arrangements, higher than average debt levels, and in many cases, do have the financing to change course on a particular product or service to meet with changing competitive environments. Lack of liquidity and increased volatility make the risk very real and tangible and because of that, they require special care and placement in a portfolio.
For instance, the younger you are, the greater portion of your portfolio can be allocated with these types of funds. Even at a youthful level, no more than 30% of what you put away for retirement should be in these types of funds.
The recent losses in the markets hit small-caps harder than large-caps. But the recovery will swing just as far in the other direction when the recovery takes hold. Lack of liquidity can often mean a more nimble approach.
Funds who buy these types of stocks tend to have higher expenses and increased turnover ratios making the need for higher overall returns more important. Once you embrace this risk for what it si, you can find yourself on the winning side of returns.








