Play Surging Health Care with These Small Cap ETFs

The healthcare space has led the broad market for most of the first half of 2013 and continues its incredible run into the second half as well (read: Top ETFs of the First Half of the Year). In fact, the SPDR Health Care Select Sector Fund (XLV) is up nearly 24.9% in the year-to-date timeframe compared to 17.0% gains for SPDR S&P 500 (SPY).

This is largely thanks to some sector rotation along with strength in biotechnology and the pharmaceuticals firms. Investors of late have been moving out of lower risk, high dividend sectors like utilities and real estate investment trusts, into higher risk, growth sectors like financials, consumer discretionary and healthcare.

The healthcare space will likely be a bright spot going forward as the U.S. is one of the major markets for healthcare and one of the largest spenders on public health, putting the sector in an advantageous position.

The sector is poised to benefit from the aging population, higher rates of chronic disease, growing demand in emerging markets, product launches and increased mergers & acquisitions. Further, the sector also looks well positioned to profit from the imminent Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) (read: 2 Great Healthcare ETFs in Focus).

Why Small Caps?

Investors are losing faith in the international economy with challenges to emerge from recession becoming tougher. Many emerging markets, including China, are also experiencing slowdown.

As a result, investors seeking to take real advantage of the growing healthcare space should focus in on small caps rather than the large caps. This is because small caps have more potential to move higher given their true domestic exposure (read: Time to Focus on Small Cap ETFs?).

These pint sized stocks aren’t big enough to be international behemoths, so these focus mostly on the U.S. for their revenues, thereby promising returns in a global slowdown. Furthermore, given their small sizes, these have a much easier time growing than their already tapped out large cap counterparts.

While small caps are often capable of higher levels of growth than large caps, these can experience levels of volatility as huge gains and losses can occur in a very short period of time. In this backdrop, we have highlighted three small cap ETFs that have generated impressive returns so far this year.

Any of the following three could be rewarding for investors with a more domestic focus in the second half of the year (see more in the Zacks ETF Center).

SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI)

This is by far the most popular choice in the biotech corner of the healthcare segment. The fund tracks the S&P Biotechnology Select Industry Index (read: Biotechnology ETF Investing 101). The product has $926.9 million in AUM and trades more than a quarter million in volume a day, while its cost is just 35 basis points a year.