“When running a small cap fund, you don’t need to worry about a single stock. If you don’t own the largest constituent and its value doubles, that doesn’t really make a difference in relative performance terms. That can be quite different for large cap managers,” he says.
Growth has its limits
The good recent performance and the absence of competition by index trackers has led to relatively high inflows. Over the past two years, a net €3.9bn has been invested in the asset class.
This is a substantial sum of money, considering the combined assets of all mid and small cap funds amount to only some €17bn, according to Morningstar data.
It has led to the biggest funds in the universe such as the Threadneedle European Smaller Companies Fund and the Baring Europe Select Fund, soft-closing. The maximum amount of money a European small cap fund can absorb is generally thought to be about €2bn, and both funds are close to reaching this limit.
Alvaro Martin Sauto, head of multi-manager funds at Bankia in Madrid, is one of these investors eager to increase their allocation to European small and mid-caps funds. “We us these funds as a diversification strategy, and may increase our exposure in the coming future,” he says. “We are also planning to increase our positions in Spanish small and mid-caps but we haven’t chosen the fund yet.”