A Generational Opportunity In Small Caps: An Interview With Howard Punch

 | Oct 09, 2022 18:00

  • Investing.com chatted with Howard Punch, president and CEO of Punch & Associates, about his investment philosophy and current market conditions
  • While timing the market is a 'fool's errand,' buying the right stocks in a bear market isn't
  • Punch believes we might be nearing a "generational opportunity" in small caps
  • In his 39 years on Wall Street, including 20 as president and CEO of the small-cap-focused boutique investment firm , Howard Punch has seen it all: wars, inflation, recessions, market crashes, and prolonged bear markets. Yet, most importantly, he has seen the market always recover in the long run.

    That's perhaps why he claims to base his investment philosophy on a timeless quote by legendary economist Benjamin Graham:

    "The intelligent investor is a realist who sells to optimists and buys from pessimists."

    With market pessimism trending at historically-high levels, Punch believes we may be nearing a "generational opportunity" in high-quality small-cap companies. As he points out, valuations in the Russell 2000 are the cheapest compared to their large-cap counterparts in 20 years—an indicator that led to significantly higher yields than the ones of the S&P 500 index in the past.

    This week, Investing.com chatted with the fund manager and CEO on his views regarding current market conditions, economic cycles, bear-market investing, and, of course, small caps.

    Investing.com: I'll start with the billion-dollar question: What's your near-term outlook for the markets and the U.S. economy?

    Howard Punch: It's hard to know for certain. All we can do is look at the past for a reference point. The Russell 2000 Index, a benchmark for small-cap companies, is down about 30% from the November 2021 highs. Few have declared the U.S. to be officially in a recession currently, yet the small-cap market has already declined more than in three of the past six recessionary bear markets. Only the dot-com era, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the Great Financial Crisis were worse.