relative performance of $QQQ vs. $IWMAMEX:IWM (Russell 2000 small-cap ETF) reached an all-time low in its relative performance vs. the NASDAQ:QQQ (Nasdaq large-cap ETF) last month. Today, however, AMEX:IWM has more than 2% of relative out-performance vs. $QQQ. And it had more than 2.5% of relative out-performance yesterday.
To give a sense of how rare this is: In the last 21 years (since the end of the dot-com crash) there were only 10 occasions when AMEX:IWM outperformed NASDAQ:QQQ by 2%+ on two consecutive trading days.
The dates:
2007-11-09:
This week brought the first rumbling of what would become the Great Financial Crash (GFC): NYSE:C CEO Prince resigned, NYSE:GM announced a $38.6B loss, Wachovia Bank, NYSE:JPM , and NYSE:BAC all warned about their exposure to subprime mortgages during that week. No wonder that large-caps got spanked.
2008-10-31:
The week before the US Presidential election, which would see Barack Obama win against John McCain. Also, one of the low points of the GFC: GDP growth for Q3 was announced to be weaker than any quarter since the 9/11 attacks, seven years earlier. Home prices were announced to have plunged by 18% in August, a record. Crude oil futures fell by 33% that week, and copper posted its worst performance in 40 years.
2016-11-10, 2016-11-11, 2016-11-14:
The week after Donald Trump won the election against Hillary Clinton. His agenda had a more domestic focus than Clinton's, so it made sense that small caps (which usually don't have global interests) stood to gain.
2020-04-09, 2020-04-28, 2020-05-27, 2020-11-10:
COVID. 'Nuff said.
2023-06-07:
The U.S. Treasury Potential Debt Default drama had a semi-happy ending.
To sum up: This extreme AMEX:IWM out-performance is often a symptom of an inflection point being reached. I wouldn't be surprised if we got at least a partial reversal tomorrow or on Wednesday, but I think that over the intermediate time frame the theme of small-cap out-performance has legs.