Small Caps Stage a Comeback
If you've been watching the market lately, you might have noticed something interesting: the little guys are finally having their moment. Over the past month, the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) has outpaced the Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF (MAGS) by a solid 5%. That's right—small caps are stealing the spotlight from the tech darlings that have dominated for so long.
What's driving this shift? It comes down to interest rates. As noted in early December market analysis, the rotation into small caps is being fueled by the higher probability of rate cuts, as reflected in Fed fund futures. Small-cap companies typically carry more debt and are more sensitive to borrowing costs, so when rates come down (or are expected to), these stocks tend to outperform.
Money has been steadily flowing into small caps since the Fed's most recent rate cut. The technical picture for IWM looks encouraging—the ETF broke out above a key support zone, and the Relative Strength Index shows it's pulled back but remains in overbought territory. This RSI pattern often precedes further upside, suggesting IWM could become even more overbought in the near term.
Seasonality is also playing in favor of small caps right now. But here's the thing: diversification beyond the Magnificent Seven is becoming increasingly important for investors who've watched their portfolios become top-heavy with mega-cap tech stocks.
A Data-Packed Week That Could Change Everything
Get ready for a flood of economic releases that could move markets significantly. Tomorrow at 8:30am ET, we'll get the official jobs report, along with October retail sales and housing starts. Any one of these could shift sentiment.
But that's just the beginning. On Wednesday at 8:30am ET, November retail sales data drops. Thursday brings the Consumer Price Index and initial jobless claims, both at 8:30am ET. Then Friday delivers the big finale: the Fed's favorite inflation gauge (PCE), personal income and spending data at 8:30am ET, followed by University of Michigan consumer sentiment at 10am ET.
Here's the deal: if all this data comes in benign, expect the stock market to ratchet higher. The seasonal tailwinds are there, ready to push stocks up. However, if any of these reports show concerning trends, data-driven selling could easily overwhelm those positive seasonal factors. It's a critical week, and the stakes are high.
Tracking Money Flows in the Magnificent Seven
Let's face it—most portfolios these days are heavily concentrated in the Magnificent Seven stocks. That makes monitoring early money flows in these names absolutely essential on a daily basis.
In early trading, money flows are looking positive in Apple Inc. (AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Alphabet Inc. Class C (GOOG), NVIDIA Corp (NVDA), and Tesla Inc. (TSLA). That's five out of seven showing strength.
Meanwhile, Meta Platforms Inc. (META) and Microsoft Corp (MSFT) are seeing neutral money flows in the early session—neither particularly strong nor weak.
The broader market ETFs are also showing positive momentum, with money flowing into both SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust Series 1 (QQQ) during early trading hours.
Why Gold Buying Has Turned Aggressive
Something notable is happening in precious metals, and it's worth paying attention to. Buying in gold and silver has become very aggressive, and the reasons behind it tell an interesting story about investor concerns.
Here's what's driving the rush into gold: The Fed cut interest rates even when the economic data didn't necessarily justify it. There's speculation that President Trump may name Kevin Hassett as the next Fed chair. These developments are raising alarms among some investors that the U.S. government might be about to tacitly debase the dollar.
To protect themselves from potential currency devaluation, investors are rushing into gold as a hedge. It's not just retail investors either—central banks continue to accumulate gold reserves, adding institutional weight to the buying pressure.
The momentum crowd is aggressively buying gold in early trading, though smart money remains on the sidelines for now. The most popular gold ETF is SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), while silver investors typically use iShares Silver Trust (SLV). For those interested in leveraged exposure, gold miner Newmont Corporation (NEM) offers another avenue.
For transparency, it's worth noting that some market participants hold positions in GLD, NEM, and SLV. Trade-around positions—a technique used by hedge funds and billionaires to increase returns while managing risk—have reached targets in NEM stock, with partial profits taken and targets raised on remaining quantities.
Bitcoin Struggles to Break Out
While gold surges, Bitcoin is taking a breather. The cryptocurrency remains range-bound, and each rally attempt continues to be met with selling pressure. It's a notable divergence from gold's strength—both are often viewed as alternative stores of value, but they're telling different stories right now.
Portfolio Strategy in This Environment
So what should investors actually do with all this information? The prudent approach involves continuing to hold quality, very long-term positions while maintaining appropriate protection levels based on individual risk tolerance.
Consider building a protection band consisting of cash, Treasury bills, or short-term tactical trades, along with short to medium-term hedges. This strategy allows you to protect capital while still participating in potential upside. You can determine your ideal protection level by combining cash and hedges—older or more conservative investors should lean toward the higher end of the protection band, while younger or more aggressive investors can operate at the lower end.
If you're not using hedges, your cash allocation should be higher than if you were hedging, but still significantly less than a combined cash-plus-hedges position would be.
Think of protection bands on a scale from 0% to 100%. A 0% protection band would be extremely bullish, indicating full investment with zero cash. A 100% protection band would be very bearish, suggesting aggressive protection through cash and hedges or even short positions.
Here's an important reminder: you can't take advantage of new opportunities if you're not holding enough cash. When markets present compelling setups, you want dry powder available. When adjusting hedge levels, consider using partial stop quantities for individual stock positions (not ETFs), implementing wider stops on remaining quantities, and allowing more room for high-beta stocks that naturally move more than the overall market.
Rethinking the Traditional 60/40 Portfolio
For those who follow the traditional 60% stocks and 40% bonds allocation, current market conditions warrant some adjustments. Probability-based risk-reward analysis, adjusted for inflation, doesn't favor long-duration strategic bond allocation at this time.
If you want to stick with the 60/40 framework, consider focusing exclusively on high-quality bonds with durations of five years or less. More sophisticated investors might treat bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic holdings in the current environment. The bond market landscape has changed, and your approach should probably change with it.
The bottom line? Small caps are having a moment, gold is surging on debasement fears, and a week of critical economic data could determine whether seasonal strength or data-driven concerns win out. Stay diversified, monitor those money flows, and keep enough cash on hand to capitalize on whatever opportunities emerge from this dynamic market environment.




