Will the Rest of the Market Catch Up?

In This Article:

Why Louis Navellier is bullish on small-cap stocks … will we see the broad market catch up to tech? … today’s “pain train” is not being invested … a mindset shift to help join in today’s gains

As you know, tech stocks have dominated 2023.

Here’s how this looks, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 surging 32% this year compared to the Dow Jones’ gain of just 1%.

Chart showing the Nasdaq 100 crushing the Dow here in 2023 by about 32% to 1%.
Chart showing the Nasdaq 100 crushing the Dow here in 2023 by about 32% to 1%.

Source: StockCharts.com

Now, being intentionally simplistic, one of two things is likely to happen over the coming weeks and months…

The tech surge will show its true colors as being “too much, too fast” and the Nasdaq 100 will fall back toward the Dow.

Or…

The Dow and the rest of the market will show new strength and join the tech rally, which will round out of the breadth of the market’s bullishness.

So, which one will it be?

Legendary investor Louis Navellier is betting on the bulls, and small cap stocks are the reason why.

The surge under the surface

Let’s jump to Louis’ Special Market Update Podcast from Accelerated Profits on Tuesday:

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Well, folks, on the surface, it looks like not a lot is going on in the stock market, but under the surface, we have a massive rally in small-cap stocks.

The Russell 2000, as I speak to you [Tuesday], is up 2.6%

This is the annual Russell realignment, which now takes the entire month of June…and we are about to witness a melt-up in small-cap stocks this month.

To make sure we’re all on the same page, the Russell 2000 index tracks the two thousand smallest-cap companies within the Russell 3000 Index. “Small-cap” refers to a company’s market capitalization, which is a measure of its size.

Whereas a company like Apple is enormous, valued at $2.8 trillion, small-cap stocks typically range between $250 million and $2 billion.

Once a year, the Russell 2000 goes through a “Russell Reconstitution” in which the index is updated to reflect the changes in company-sizes over the prior year. This can be a catalyst for some stocks because many ETFs and mutual funds track the Index. When the Russell composition changes, the ETFs and mutual funds change along with it, causing enormous buying pressure.  

Without getting into too many details, the Russell organization gave its preliminary list of index additions and deletions in May. Then, here in June, the list will be updated a few times before the final reconstitution list is set in stone, which will then be “official” when the market opens on June 26th.

With this context, let’s return to Louis:

This [realignment] takes the entire month of June, releasing preliminary lists after the close each Friday.

This will cause a lot of institutional buying pressure in small-cap stocks.