Mutual
funds that invest in smaller companies may at times do better than
index funds which specialize in similar, so-called smaller cap stocks.
At times they have not done badly, when trying to outperform the indexes
of larger companies.
But
there is a fallacy here. Few managers can truly evaluate smaller
companies, even less than they can evaluate larger companies. Smaller
companies are more erratic than those larger, and their corporate
fortunes are more difficult to anticipate.
Smaller
public companies may do better than larger companies for shorter
periods but are more susceptible to business hazards and cycles.
(See the Earl J. Weinreb NewsHole® comments and @BusinesNewshole at Twitter.)
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