15 Apr 2026
Originally published in February 2026
U.S. small-cap stocks have outperformed recently thanks to faster earnings growth.
Small‑cap stocks in the U.S. market have staged a notable comeback in recent months, marking a sharp reversal after a prolonged period of underperformance. Since October 2025, small‑caps have outperformed large‑caps in a meaningful way, raising an important question for investors: Is this just a short‑term bounce or something more durable?
For nearly three years, U.S. small‑cap stocks steadily lost ground relative to U.S. large‑caps. From December 31, 2022, through October 31, 2025, the S&P SmallCap 600 Index underperformed the S&P 500 Index by almost 30 percentage points on a cumulative basis. That trend changed abruptly in late 2025. From the end of October through January 27 of this year, small‑caps returned 8.95%, while large‑caps gained just 2.33%.
As a result, the cumulative underperformance since the end of 2022 narrowed to roughly 25 percentage points (Figure 1). This sudden shift has understandably drawn investor attention.
(Fig. 1) Cumulative total returns on the S&P SmallCap 600 Index relative to the S&P 500 Index
December 31, 2022, through January 27, 2026.
Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.
Sources: T. Rowe Price analysis using data from FactSet Research Systems Inc. All rights reserved.
FTSE Russell. Visit troweprice.com/marketdata for additional legal notices and disclaimers.
Importantly, the small‑cap rebound has not been driven by sentiment alone. Beneath the surface, fundamentals also have turned.
After falling sharply for almost three years, small‑cap earnings began to rapidly improve in late 2025. While trailing 12‑month earnings for the S&P 600 fell 36% from the end of 2022 through September 19, 2025, they rebounded 27% through January 27, 2026, leaving them only 19% lower than their 2022 peak (Figure 2).
(Fig. 2) Cumulative change in trailing 12‑month earnings per share
December 31, 2022, to January 27, 2026.
Past performance is not a guarantee or a reliable indicator of future results.
Sources: T. Rowe Price analysis using data from FactSet Research Systems Inc. All rights reserved.
FTSE Russell. Visit troweprice.com/marketdata for additional legal notices and disclaimers.
This earnings inflection represents a meaningful shift from the past several years, when deteriorating fundamentals were a persistent headwind for small‑cap performance. Several forces now appear to be working in small‑caps’ favor.
After nearly three years of poor relative performance, there is now clear evidence that U.S. small‑cap stocks are experiencing a renaissance. Performance has improved and, more importantly, earnings growth has pivoted in a supportive direction.
In anticipation of this shift, our Asset Allocation Committee has maintained an overweight position in U.S. small‑cap stocks relative to U.S. large‑caps—and we have gradually increased that overweight over the past several months. We believe an improving fundamental backdrop provides a durable foundation for small‑cap performance going forward.
Capital Markets Strategist