Small caps rally as Magnificent 7 stocks roll over in market rotation

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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on August 11, 2025.

NYSE

Small-cap stocks jumped on Wednesday, bucking the slide in some of the market’s largest companies, as investors bet that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates starting in September — lowering the cost of capital and possibly boosting consumer spending.

The small cap-focused Russell 2000 gained more than 1% in midday trading. By comparison, the broad S&P 500 was little changed, held back by major technology stocks.

The CNBC Magnificent 7 Index, which tracks seven megacap technology companies, lost 0.3% after hitting a 52-week high earlier in the day.

“If the Fed cuts rates in September, this would greatly benefit small caps, as many small caps are levered to the economy and also financially,” said Larry Tentarelli, founder of the Blue Chip Trend Report, who called small caps a “rate cut rotation” play.

Among the largest percentage gains in smallcaps Wednesday were Chemours, up more than 17%; Hillenbrand, higher by 14%; Dream Finders Homes, ahead 12%; and Jack in the Box and Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals, both rising more than 10%.

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One-day chart of Russell 2000 vs Mag 7

With Wednesday’s gain, the Russell 2000 has added more than 4% this week, on track for its best week since May.

Traders expect rate cuts

The rally comes as investors have grown confident that the Fed will lower rates at its next policy meeting on September 16-17. Lower rates particularly benefit small companies that rely on borrowed capital to finance their operations, inventories or expansion plans.

Interest rate futures traders are pricing in a nearly 100% likelihood that the central bank lowers the fed funds rate from its current 4.35% to 4.50% range at the September gathering, according to prices of 30-day futures on the CME that are calculated on its FedWatch tool. That’s up from less than 60% a month ago.

A growing chorus of economic and political voices have been pushing for rate cuts, especially after weaker-than-expected job growth in July, a downward revision to labor market growth in May and June, and this week’s consumer inflation report that showed the headline come in cooler than expected. The Fed has held rates steady ever since last December, partly due to questions surrounding the effect of President Donald Trump’s tariff on inflation.

But July’s Fed meeting showed divisions in what central bankers see as the best path for future monetary policy, with two members disagreeing with holding rates steady. After Fed Governor Adriana Kugler resigned earlier this month, Trump said he would nominate economic advisor Stephen Miran to fill the vacancy.

Trump and has allies have frequently attacked Fed Chair Jerome Powell in recent months over the central bank’s rate policy, urging the Federal Open Market Committee to ease monetary policy. The president has also hinted at firing Powell, and on Tuesday threatened to let a lawsuit focused on the cost of the Fed’s headquarters renovation go forward.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, speaking Wednesday in an interview on “Bloomberg Surveillance,” said that the Fed should lower rates by at least 1.5 percentage points.

“I think we could go into a series of rate cuts here, starting with a 50 basis point rate cut in September,” Bessent said, adding that “any model” suggests “we should probably be 150, 175 basis points lower.” One basis point equals 1/100th of a percent, or 0.01%.

Wednesday’s move notwithstanding, smallcaps have a long way to go to catch up with the stock market’s leaders. Since the introduction of the ChatGPT artificial intelligence app in late 2022, the Russell 2000 index has advanced less than 26% while the S&P 500 has climbed 64% over the same span.

— CNBC’s Lisa Kailai Han contributed to this report.


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