It's hardly breaking news at this point, but it bears repeating: Small-cap stocks are your best bet for superior returns. After all, small-cap stocks have trounced their larger brethren over the past 80 years -- and over the past three decades, the competition hasn't even been close:
Annualized Return
Small Caps
Large Caps
1926 to 2006
12.7%
10.4%
1976 to 2006
17.5%
12.8%
Data from Ibbotson Associates.
Meanwhile, a recent study by Jeff Anderson and Gary Smith from Pomona College shows that America's most admired companies also have a tendency to beat the market. Anderson and Smith analyzed the returns of Fortune's list of the 10 most admired companies from 1983 to 2004. They found that a portfolio of these stocks outperformed the S&P 500 by "a substantial and statistically significant margin."
By the power of the transitive property So it stands to reason:
A. If investing in small-cap stocks generates market-beating returns, and ... B. If investing in the market's best companies generates market-beating returns ... C. Then investing in the market's best small-cap companies should generate market-annihilating returns.
If only there were a list of the best small-cap companies ... Fortunately, the folks over at Forbes magazine compile an annual list of the 200 best small companies in America. According to Forbes, companies "must pass through a gauntlet to qualify for the list," so you know you're getting the cream of the crop.
To make Forbes' list, a company must have revenue between $5 million and $750 million and a share price higher than $5, and must also clear certain thresholds for returns on equity, sales, and income.
That's some list As you might expect, Forbes' list boasts some impressive names and more than a few familiar faces. The list successfully identified small-cap stalwarts such as Buckle (NYSE: BKE), Green Mountain Coffee Roasters (Nasdaq: GMCR), and Strayer Education (Nasdaq: STRA) long before they emerged from the pack.
Forbes was also early to the party on success stories such as Copart (Nasdaq: CPRT), Citrix Systems (Nasdaq: CTXS), and Fastenal (Nasdaq: FAST). Look at the returns:
Company
First Appeared on the Forbes List
Return Since First Appearance*
Buckle
Oct. 3, 1996
693%
Citrix Systems
Sept. 26, 2002
472%
Copart
Oct. 1, 2000 Continued... |