The passive giants are leaving crumbs – and we’re feasting

You’re reading a free article on Rask. Join 4,000+ Australians who get our expert advice, tools, exclusive research and investment recommendations. Get your 30-day trial for $1! Learn more

Investing in small caps can sometimes feel like living in the shadow of a giant. But as giants lumber across the market, they drop crumbs — and for nimble investors like us, those crumbs can be a feast.

The rise of passive funds and superannuation behemoths has reshaped equity markets. It’s a trend that’s largely good for investors: lower fees, broad diversification, and disciplined investing. But it also creates distortions, especially in smaller companies, and that’s where our opportunities lie.

Here’s how passive investing trends have delivered three key tailwinds for us over the past year.

Price-agnostic sellers

First, passive giants often become forced sellers when companies slip out of the indices they track. Stocks that were once big enough to be in the S&P/ASX 200 or 300 can suddenly find themselves dropped — and their share prices can collapse under waves of indiscriminate selling.

Take Johns Lyng Group Ltd (ASX: JLG). Its market cap topped $2 billion in 2022, earning it a spot in the S&P/ASX 200. But by March this year, it had fallen more than 75% from its peak and was booted from the index. While the business may not be quite as good as markets once believed, we don’t think it’s nearly as bad as the share price suggests. Yet much of the share price plunge reflects passive selling from investors who never even asked the question: what’s this business worth?

Fund closures have also played a role. Several small-cap managers closed shop over the past year as super funds pulled mandates, flooding the market with stocks that had to be sold regardless of price. That’s when we step in: to pick up quality businesses at fire-sale prices.

Thematic waves

Second, the boom in thematic ETFs is creating new pockets of opportunity. Thematic funds let investors bet on trends like defence, artificial intelligence, or cybersecurity. But while they promise targeted exposure, they often carry high fees and can attract hot money that rushes in at the top, and then flees at the bottom.

We’ve seen some great businesses get tossed out with the thematic bathwater. Comfort Systems USA Inc (NYSE: FIX), a US-based HVAC specialist, is a perfect example. We first met management in 2023 and thought it was a solid business, but probably too expensive. A year later, our International Fund’s Harvey Migotti revisited the company and flagged significant tailwinds from data centre construction and reshoring US manufacturing.

The stock had doubled in the interim. But then came Donald Trump’s renewed assault on global trade, and Comfort Systems’ share price fell 46% in just over two months. Fundamentally, nothing had changed: the company had net cash and years of work ahead. Yet thematic outflows crushed its price, giving us an excellent buying window. That kind of volatility is music to our ears.

Crumbs that grow large enough for giants

Third, some crumbs eventually become big enough for giants to notice. It is at this stage that passive buying can turbocharge returns.

Look at Catapult Group International Ltd (ASX: CAT). In mid-2022, barely 28,000 shares traded hands in a day. Fast forward to today, and daily volumes often top a million shares, with a share price up fivefold. Index inclusion hasn’t been the whole story. Catapult’s business has genuinely improved, with revenue growing nearly 20% a year. But being added to the S&P/ASX 300 has poured fuel on the fire, forcing passive funds to buy in and adding liquidity and visibility.

That’s why, when we’re evaluating new investments, we always ask: Could this business eventually attract passive buying? It’s not the only reason to own a stock, but it can dramatically amplify returns once the giants start paying attention.

Passive giants will keep dominating markets. And yes, small-cap indices have lagged their large-cap counterparts in recent years. But that doesn’t mean all small-cap investing is doomed. While many index-driven small-cap funds have struggled, some active managers — including us at Forager — have delivered excellent returns by hunting among the crumbs: forced sellers, battered thematic plays, and future index entrants.

As the passive influence continues to grow, those crumbs should keep falling. And for nimble investors, they’re a feast worth pursuing.

 

 

DISCLAIMER: This article has been prepared by Forager Funds Management Pty Ltd ABN 78 138 351 345 AFSL No. 459312.

Forager Funds Management provides general information only and does not take account of your individual investment objectives, financial situation or needs. Past performance is not indicative of future performance.

The Trust Company (RE Services) Limited (ABN 45 003 278 831 and AFSL No. 235150) is the issuer of the Forager Australian Shares Fund (ARSN No. 139 641 491) and the Forager International Shares Fund (ARSN No. 161 843 778). Before deciding whether to acquire or continue to hold the product, you should read the relevant Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) and seek advice from investment and taxation professionals to determine if the product is appropriate for your needs. Both Forager International Shares Fund and Forager Australian Shares Fund PDS’s and Target Market Determination (TMD) are available here.

CSL, Xero, ANZ... the ASX is beaten up

Right now, only brave investors are buying. Is ASX Reporting Season your KEY opportunity to act? Buy, or sell.

This coming Monday night, our two most experienced professional investors, Owen Rask and Leigh Gant, are hosting an exclusive and rare webinar on the what to watch this ASX reporting season. LIVE and free

With over 35 years of combined investing experience, join our Chief Investment Officer and Head of Content for our free Q&A.

We’ll be diving into results from CSL, Pro Medicus (ASX: PME), ANZ Bank and more. It’s absolutely free to join us. Take advantage of this volatility with our free playbook. Simply click here to view the topics.

At the time of publishing, the author or their clients may have a financial interest, for or against, any of the companies mentioned in this article.

A $50,000 per year passive income special report

Join more 50,000 Australian investors who read our weekly investing newsletter and we’ll send you our passive income investing report right now.

How can Rask help you?

About Rask

Learn more about us, our your community and our mission.

Rask investing philosophy

Nearly 15 years later.
It's still a work in progress.

Online investment community

You won't find our investment community on Facebook or Reddit because it's secure, free and available now.

Join 250,000+ podcast listeners

250,000 investors tune into the Rask podcasts every month. Find out why.

Find a financial planner

Australia's financial experts. At your doorstep.

Free finance courses

35,000 students have enrolled in free Rask courses. We're on a mission to 100,000.

Subscribe to Rask's free investor newsletter

53,000 Australian investors subscribe to our Sunday newsletter... and love it! It's free.

$50 million invested

We manage almost $50 million on behalf of Aussies. Discover how you can invest with us.

Better investing starts here.

Want to level-up your analytical skills and investing insights but don’t know where to start? Join 50,000 Australian investors on our mailing list and we’ll send you our favourite podcasts, courses, resources and investment articles every Sunday morning. Grab a coffee and let Owen and the team bring you the best  insights.

Subscribe to Rask's free investor newsletter

Kick off your week with our pick of podcasts, courses and investing resources to keep your finger on the Rask pulse!

Here you go: A $50,000 per year passive income special report

Join more 50,000 Australian investors who read our weekly investing newsletter and we’ll send you our passive income investing report right now.

Simply enter your email address and we’ll send it to you. No tricks. Unsubscribe anytime.

Unsubscribe anytime. Read our TermsFinancial Services GuidePrivacy Policy. We’ll never sell your email address. Our company is Australian owned.