Economic Deck
In this quarterly update, Brian Collins, Chief Investment Officer at HUB Retirement & Private Wealth (HUB RPW), recaps a turbulent quarter under the theme “The World Runs on Energy.”
Key Highlights:
- A quarter in three acts: January brought modest gains, February saw weakness in mega-cap AI stocks while overseas markets continued rallying, and March turned negative with the onset of the Iran conflict — resulting in a mixed bag of returns for the quarter.
- Energy and geopolitics take center stage: The Iran conflict disrupted oil and gas supply chains, triggering inflation fears and rattling global equity markets. Despite this, investors and markets showed resilience, treating the disruption as a speed bump rather than a breaking point.
- Mixed economic signals: GDP growth appears to be slowing after a period of robust growth mid-2025. Inflation remains above the Fed’s target, consumer sentiment hit new lows (though actual spending continues to grow), and labor market data is shifting due to immigration policy changes.
- The yield curve and Fed outlook: Despite 1.75% in rate cuts since September 2024, long-term rates have risen modestly, signaling that investors expect inflation to persist, fiscal deficits to remain elevated, and growth to slow. The Fed is expected to stay in pause mode for the rest of the year.
- AI vs. old economy: AI-driven stocks faced headwinds as old economy sectors outperformed amid elevated levels of volatility.
Small Cap Reversal
In this video, Chris Wright-Madison, Senior Analyst of Investments at HUB RPW, breaks down a notable Q1 trend: the surprising outperformance of small cap stocks over large cap.
Key Highlights:
- A striking Q1 reversal: The S&P 500 fell -4.33% in Q1, while small cap value — measured by the Russell 2000 Value — finished up 4.96%, resulting in a 9.29 percentage point spread in favor of small cap in a single quarter.
- Cuts against a long-running trend: Over the past 3, 5, 10, 15, and 20 years, large cap has outpaced small cap by three to eight percentage points annually. Over the last decade, the S&P 500 returned over 14% annually versus under 10% for small cap value — a gap largely driven by a handful of mega-cap technology companies.
- Concentration risk on full display: That same mega-cap concentration that fueled large cap dominance worked against it this quarter — when sentiment shifted, those names pulled the entire index down quickly.
- A statistically rare event: Looking back over roughly 20 years of quarterly data, a spread this wide — small cap value outperforming large cap by 9% or more in a single quarter — has occurred fewer than one in ten quarters.
Why Small Cap Value Deserves Attention Now: Chris highlights three reasons to watch this space: its domestic revenue focus offers a relative advantage in a tariff-uncertain, supply-chain-disrupted environment; valuations remain at a meaningful discount to both their own history and to large cap; and historical data shows that extended periods of small cap value underperformance have often been followed by outsized gains — making Q1 a potential early signal of mean reversion.
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