When President Donald Trump was re-elected in November, there were high hopes that his policies would support the struggling industrial core of the US and foster the growth of small companies.
According to a group headed by Michael Hartnett, an investment expert at BofA Global Research, shares of tiny businesses have been overtaken by so-called Bro Billionaire stocks thus far.
The BofA team used an equal-weighted average of a selection of well-known equities from the cryptocurrency and technology sectors for the “Bro” category. Among these stocks was Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR), a data-mining firm that recently won a defense contract from the US government.
According to the team, the Russell 2000 index RUT of small-cap stocks was down almost 7% since Trump’s election, while the exclusive group of equities had increased by more than 45%.
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), a titan of artificial intelligence, Meta Platforms Inc. (META), Telsa Inc. (TSLA), Interactive Brokers Group Inc. (IBKR), the ARK Innovation exchange-traded fund ARKK, Coinbase Global Inc. (COIN), Apollo Global Management Inc. (APO), and XBT, the international ticker for bitcoin (BTCUSD), are also part of the “Bro” group.
When Trump first startled Wall Street with his broad tariffs on April 2, high-flying tech stocks were particularly hard affected. Trump’s 90-day halt on some tariffs, which is scheduled to end in early July, has allowed large-cap stocks to regain ground.
As a result of declining sales of electric vehicles, Tesla’s stock fell more than 25% for the year. The public conflict between Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who was Trump’s close political adviser until recently, also grew this week.
The long-awaited comeback of small caps has not yet materialized in a significant sense, despite early expectations for 2025. Small firms may be more negatively impacted by tariffs and the uncertainty around them than large tech corporations with enormous cash reserves.
Furthermore, small-cap firms frequently need consistent access to funding. Since Trump’s election, longer-duration Treasury yields have increased, making that more costly and difficult to obtain.
The Republican budget bill currently being considered by the Senate has raised serious concerns in the bond market because it may significantly increase rather than reduce the sizeable U.S. deficit. This could necessitate more Treasury issuance and create some uncertainty about the yield that investors may need.
Nevertheless, Friday saw a surge in equities of all sizes, with the S&P 500 index SPX momentarily regaining its 6,000 mark following a May employment report that revealed the labor economy was more resilient than anticipated. Nevertheless, there was little confidence regarding tariffs and almost 7 million Americans without jobs.
According to FactSet, the 10-year Treasury yield, BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, increased 10 basis points to 4.49% on Friday.
Because they increase the cost of obtaining a new mortgage, auto loan, business loan, or other types of debt that support economic financing, higher yields are significant.