Large capitalization stocks are poised to outperform small capitalization stocks over the medium to long term, according to an analysis by BNY Mellon Beta Management that uses the Standard & Poor's 500 Index and the Russell 2000 Index for its models.
"Looking at the differential between the expected returns of large cap and small cap stocks, it appears that large caps have a good chance of outperforming small stocks over the next decade," said Mark Keleher, CEO of BNY Mellon Beta Management, in a statement. "Once you figure in the higher transaction costs for small caps, large caps appear even more attractive."
In the study, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index served as a proxy for large caps and the Russell 2000 Index served as a proxy for small caps.
BNY Mellon Beta Management, a San Francisco-based division of The Bank of New York Mellon, studied the expected returns of small caps versus large cap in June 2010 and updated its calculations in January 2011.
The division is a BNY Mellon Asset Management business that facilitates rebalancing programs and synthetic asset class exposure through the use of futures, swaps, index funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). BNY Mellon has $25.0 trillion in assets under custody and administration and $1.17 trillion in assets under management, services $12.0 trillion in outstanding debt and processes global payments averaging $1.6 trillion per day.
The June 2010 study concluded that large caps are undervalued compared with small caps, according to a Tuesday news release.