This is encouraging.
cbs.marketwatch.com
If the small cap fits, then wear it Mini stocks may begin to grow again soon
By Thom Calandra, CBS MarketWatch.com Last Update: 5:44 AM ET Jun 16, 2000 NewsWatch Latest headlines
LONDON (FTMW) -- Small stocks in the United States and Europe appear poised for a powerful comeback.
Several measures, including the Russell 2000 Index in the U.S. and the FTSE Small Cap Index in London, have risen 10 percent and 5 percent respectively from lows they touched May 24. For the past 30 days, the two indexes, which represent the best and brightest of their countries? small companies, are neck-and-neck: up 5 percent. (See charts at right.)
Such gains, given these indexes? steep falls since March, are manna from heaven. Investors, stock brokers and especially, small-cap executives, are all dreaming about a return to the good times of 1999 and early 2000. The worldwide focus is on that group of companies hit hardest this year: Internet businesses. (See related story.)
Small-cap executives are going on record with forecasts of better days ahead.
?Internet stocks will get better once the group starts to achieve profitability,? chief operating officer Dean Daniels of Web publisher theglobe.com (TGLO: news, msgs) told me this week in his New York City office.
?I have no doubt investors will come round to emerging businesses once they prove they can operate as self-financed companies,? said Peter Agertoft, CEO of Futuremedia PLC (FMDAY: news, msgs), a London-area online content company.
What?s the central reason the world?s smallest companies, especially those in the technology arena, are poised for a powerful summer rally? It?s the wall-of-cash theory. Central banks around the globe have been expanding their money supplies at a record pace for three years now. Plus, investors are spoiled. Equity markets generated more than $5 trillion of profits for the world?s fund managers in 1999. (See related column.)
Windfall city
A lot of the equity windfall came from tech stocks. Investors are spoiled and greedy. They?re searching for the potent returns they saw last winter.
Small company shares in the U.S. -- those valued at between $200 million and $1.5 billion -- rose 50 percent in the whirlwind rally that started in November and ended abruptly in mid-March. The gain for British small-caps, as they are called, was about 38 percent during the same span. The Russell 2000 in the U.S., by the way, holds 2,000 stocks, and its members will change July 1.
The FTSE Small-Cap Index, many of whose members, like 365 Corp. (UK:TSF: news, msgs)and Vocalis Group (UK:VOC: news, msgs) were hit hard in this spring?s tech tumble, holds about 437 companies. Both indexes have seen their rosters shaken up. Many Internet-related stocks on both sides of the Atlantic, like theglobe.com in New York and 365 Corp. and Vocalis in London, have been booted from larger indexes because of their falling market caps.
Still, Internet and other small company executives are coming out of the woodwork, saying that they are delivering on their prospectuses? original promises.
?The financial markets are going to be very surprised to see what exists under the hood of a to-date $15 million small-cap company,? Adam Epstein, CEO of e-mail services company Superus Holdings Inc. (SPRS: news, msgs) of San Francisco, tells me. Superus, also known as electronic parts maker Surge Components, is a tiny company that is developing e-mail and other online networks in Latin America.
?We?re the only U.S. public company that is developing the Internet superstructure for businesses in emerging economies, with a pan-regional network of profitable technology companies,? Epstein said.
That kind of confidence is catchy and could inspire investors.
At theglobe.com in downtown Manhattan, Daniels, the chief operating officer, says tiny companies such as his, their stocks deflated beyond belief, can breathe a sigh of relief.
?The idea of the bubble bursting is what we faced 18 months ago,? Daniels said. Around him, theglobe.com employees went about their work. The company?s IPO two years ago was one of the most publicized of the Internet era.
?This company has been around or six years. We?ve had good sequential revenue growth. We know what our plan is,? said theglobe.com?s Daniels.
Investors, start your engines. (We?ll report more on theglobe.com and Internet stocks next week on our MarketWatch.com television show: ?CBS MarketWatch Weekend.? This week, across U.S. television stations, I will take a look at tiny sex-drug developer NexMed Inc.)
Thom Calandra is editor of FTMarketWatch and CBS MarketWatch.com. |