Small cap stocks are staging a strong return, and ETFs tracking the space are reflecting this rally. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (NYSE:IWM), for instance, rose almost 12% so far this month, heading for its biggest gain since December 2023. The move comes after a correction in March and has helped take the Russell 2000 Index close to record highs.
Since reaching their respective year-to-date lowest points on March 30, the Russel 2000 has gained more than 15% till now, outpacing the S&P 500’s 12% gains.

The rebound can be attributed to the significant pullback in oil prices and reducing cost pressures for domestically oriented firms.
The recent surge also underscores a broader rotation. Since August 2025, the Russell 2000 has climbed 28%, outpacing the S&P 500, which is up 14% over the same period.
This relative outperformance might suggest that investors are moving away from popular mega-cap names into more cyclical and interest-rate sensitive parts of the market, a shift often associated with early-cycle dynamics.
ETF Breadth Signals Strength Beyond Beta
Significantly, the rally is not restricted to just general index exposure. There are various small-cap ETFs that have been hitting their respective 52-week highs on Monday, indicating solid breadth.
The list includes, among others, the Pacer US Small Cap Cash Cows 100 ETF (BATS:CALF), the Invesco Dorsey Wright Smallcap Momentum ETF (NASDAQ:DWAS), and the Victory US Smallcap High Dividend Volatility Weighted ETF (NASDAQ:CSB).
Core and multi-factor exposures, including the BNY Mellon US Small Cap Core Equity ETF (NYSE:BKSE), FT Active Factor Small Cap ETF (NYSE:AFSM), and WisdomTree U.S. SmallCap Fund (NYSE:EES), have also climbed to fresh 52-week highs.
This shows that the move has not been isolated to a few stocks only, which indicates a broader rotation into small caps.
Small Caps Back In Rate-Sensitive Mode
Given that expectations are turning more dovish for the Fed, with 27% of market expecting a rate cut in December according to the CME FedWatch tool, investors seem to be betting on better prospects for small-cap ETFs, going forward. Given that small caps are relatively more domestic- and leverage-focused companies, any dovish bias from the Fed is expected to favor them significantly.
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