On near-term opportunities, Nichols said, “Smallcaps are a good complement. Fundamentals for largecap tech remain strong, but smallcaps, hit by higher interest rates, are now seeing tailwinds as rate cuts continue into next year. They could add alpha alongside largecap positions.”
On a potential leadership shift, he noted, “If a shift happens, smallcaps could benefit versus largecaps, even in a down market. More likely, earnings growth in smaller companies could lead to short-term catch-up or outperformance, but timing is hard to predict.”
Regarding tech and the Fab-7, Nichols explained, “Fundamentals remain strong. Capex is not slowing and intentions exceed expectations, so the trade could continue in the short term. What happens two to three years from now is less certain.”
On medium-term capex growth, he said, “At some point, a digestion period is likely due to the law of large numbers. This may cause multiple contraction, but not necessarily a major earnings slowdown.”
Addressing potential corrections, Nichols added, “If growth slows, major corrections are unlikely. A sharp capex downturn, however, could have a more dramatic market impact.” On valuations, he observed, “Some smallcap pockets are showing euphoria, with early-stage companies trading at high multiples with little fundamental support. This could reverse, so we remain cautious.” Finally, on macro and policy factors, Nichols stated, “Policy will matter more for cyclical smallcaps than for big tech. Incentives like capex depreciation could boost domestic investment, while protectionist measures may compress margins. Overall, industrial activity could support cyclical sectors.”
As US markets balance strong largecaps with potential smallcap opportunities, investors are advised to maintain diversified approaches while monitoring policy, industrial activity, and capex trends.














