Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (2024)

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (1)

This constituent concentration is not limited to the Russell 1000® Index. Figure 11 demonstrates that the 1,500 smallest companies in the Russell 2000® Index make up only 29% of the total valuation of the index total, and have a weighted average market capitalization that is only one-third as much as the 500 largest companies in that same index. This concentration has been growing over the last decade.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (2)

This is a phenomenon we have seen before. In the late 1990’s, the NASDAQ-100 Index dwarfed the size of the remaining 4,000+ companies in the NASDAQ Composite, and masked the underlying sell-off in the market that began in late 1996 and resulted in the market crash of early 2000. In fact, it took nearly 15 years for the NASDAQ Composite to recover. As well, in the late 1960’s and into the early 1970’s, a group of stocks known as the “Nifty Fifty” took a very concentrated share of investment returns, only to end up resulting in massive sell-offs and index declines.

Passive Investing – The rise of passive investing is well documented. Mutual fund and ETF data suggest that many investors believe that they are unable to select active managers that will outperform their respective index. It is true that outperformance each and every year is a very high hurdle to expect from a long-only manager. However, there are areas where managers can add value.

Derived from eVestment, Figure 12 considers active managers in three equity asset classes – Large, Small and Micro. Clearly, the smaller the companies, the better the chance for active management gains. Passive investing feeds the momentum trade, just as it did in the 1990’s, until those trades unwound under the scrutiny of valuation.

Asset Growth of Investment Managers - When investment managers demonstrate an ability to generate excess returns, the market delivers assets. As this happens, a point is reached at which the manager must invest in larger companies to deploylarger allocations of capital. In our small cap peer group, this results in “market cap creep,” as seen in Figure 13.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (4)

This “market cap creep” fuels a momentum trade into the largest companies at the expense of the smaller, cheaper assets. This strategy works as long as market momentum continues to be a tailwind.

Will the Pendulum Swing the Other Direction?

Given these trends of the last ten years, why should anyone care about small company value stocks? We believe that small company value stocks will come in favor again for two reasons; 1) valuations are attractive and 2) strategic buyers or private investors will ultimately seek out the undervalued companies.

Valuations are Attractive – Over the years, our clients have heard us stress the importance of paying the right price for an asset. Small company value stocks today have some of the most appealing valuations we have seen in a long time.

The two charts below demonstrate value as a function of sales and earnings. Both measures are at levels not seen in years. Each index is represented by a proxy, which is defined as the recreation of the Russell indices at the beginning of every calendar year.

Not only are absolute valuations low, but relative valuations suggest that small company value stocks are long overdue for an extended run. If the historical context explained above is to revert to the long-term trend, that increase will be led by the smaller companies in the market, and the smaller companies within the index.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (5)

Why is this? As smaller companies grow, their characteristics evolve over time.

Figure 16 displays profitability for three equity indexes, the Russell 1000®, the Russell 2000® and the Russell Microcap® Index. It shows increasing profitability of larger firms to smaller firms. As smaller companies grow, they gain efficiencies and scale that translate into higher profits. With those higher profits, over time, the market starts to pay more for their revenues. Said another way, their multiples expand.

Figure 17 shows the total enterprise value to sales multiple for that same group of companies. It is easy to see that through the progression of size, the excess returns on capital from small companies increase and the market is willing to pay for it.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (6)

Strategic Buyers or Private Investors — The situation presented in Figure 16 and Figure 17 create the classic opportunity for an accretive acquisition by strategic buyers. A larger public company, trading at a higher valuation multiple due to higher profitability, can often create value by purchasing a smaller peer. By eliminating overlapping costs, and the synergies and scale that comes from integrating the smaller company, the strategic acquirer can often achieve higher profitability on the acquired revenue quickly and keep its higher multiple of revenue on the combined entity.

If public investors do not pay for these potential excess returns, the private markets will. Evidence for that is shown in the table below. The vast majority of M&A transactions occur with companies that are below $1 billion in valuation. Current premiums paid for middle-market deals average about 500 bps higher than for larger companies.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (7)

In Closing

Because of the recent trends in investment returns, we are optimistic about the future. Small company value stocks have been a solid leading investment over the long run, and we believe that trend will continue. Based on our analysis, we find compelling reasons why deploying capital to small company value stocks will be a successful long-term strategy and is a prudent choice now.

Ultimately, investment preference will be determined by returns earned on capital deployed. We do not believe that this basic principle has changed. There will always be periods of time, some longer than others, that test investors patience, or lead investors to believe in fashionable investment trends that are not based on a solid valuation framework.

At Pacific Ridge Capital, we will continue to adhere to our proven small company value-oriented investment philosophy.

Sincerely,

Pacific Ridge Capital Partners

1Kenneth French Data Source: https://mba.tuck.dartmouth.edu/pages/faculty/ken.french/data_library.html
2The Russell Microcap Index inception date was 1/1/2000, therefore, the eVestment Micro Cap Universe excess returns are shown beginning with 2005 data.

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (8)

Commentary — Pacific Ridge Capital Partners (2024)
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