While markets have recently regained some of
their momentum, investors' anxieties still loom
large, fixed upon the market's (and the
economy's) short-term actions. Once these fears
subside, markets may once again make a move to
higher short and long-term results.
The Importance of a Long-term Perspective
In order to gain some perspective on the
current state of U.S. equities, it is helpful to
review how the market performed over long-term
periods in the past.

Historically, trailing 10-year returns for
U.S. stocks have rotated from low-to-high and
high-to-low. The December 2008 period
represented a new low. In each of the prior
periods when 10-year returns approached or fell
below zero, subsequent returns improved,
eventually exceeding 15% on an average annual
total return basis.
These long-term results reinforce the
cyclicality of the U.S. equity market. As
short-term events pulled down share prices,
opportunities arose that set the stage for
market's next up phase.
Why Small-Caps
Although many investors believe that
small-caps tend to shine when the market is
roaring, historically, the opposite has been
true. For small-cap investors, it has been the
periods that fell below peak general market
returns that have offered the best opportunities
on a relative basis.
While large-caps generally outperformed
small-caps during periods of high 10-year
returns, small-caps had more periods of
outperformance during normal-and lower-return
10-year periods.

The current period is no exception. As of
June 30, 2009, the 10-year average annual total
return for the Russell 2000 was +2.4%, while the
S&P 500 suffered an annualized loss of 2.2%.
The Impact of Short-Term
Events
While keeping one's expectations reasonable
and having a long-term view are important, it's
striking that the most dramatic market movements
generally occur over relatively short time
spans. For example, while the 10-year returns
for the market as of June 30, 2009 were very
poor, it was two distinct shorter-term
experiences that capsized returns: the
post-bubble correction that lasted 2½ years
(March 2000 through October 2002) and the
current market turmoil that has so far lasted
approximately 1½ years (whether measured from
the small-cap peak in July 2007 or the large-cap
peak in October 2007).
For the S&P 500, these two declines
represented a total loss of 76.5%, which
occurred in just under four years. For the
remaining six years, the index's total return
was an impressive 239.1%. For the small-cap
Russell 2000, the results were similar, though
with even stronger positive results. The
small-cap index's return during the two major
declines within the past 10 years resulted in a
loss of 78.4% in a little more than four years.
In the nearly six years of generally rising
markets, the index gained 413.1%. The impact of
these shorter-term declines was therefore highly
significant.
Why Now?
Their impact can be further evaluated by
examining historical five-year results for
small-cap stocks. For the CRSP 6-10, five-year
returns have ranged from a low of -29.8% to a
high of 57.0%. Perhaps not surprisingly, the
period of the highest returns followed on the
heels of the period with the lowest returns.

In the post-World War II period, there have
been 700 monthly trailing five-year periods for
the CRSP 6-10 index. During this period, the
index's returns were negative only 5% of the
time and between zero and 10% only 26% of the
time; in the remaining 69% of the periods, the
index posted double-digit returns.

One of the most significant aspects of this
record is the experience of the index following
those periods when its return was below zero.
Each time that the CRSP 6-10's five-year average
annual total return was negative, the subsequent
return was above 10%, and was above 20% nearly
two-thirds of the time.

So while the market's current gyrations have
increased investors' anxiety and perhaps about
small-caps in particular, the seeds of the
market's next up phase are likely being sown
within these same dismal conditions. While some
continued volatility is likely, we believe the
market's next movement should be rewarding for
many small-cap investors in both the short- and
longer-term.
* Mr. Siegel combined the
market data collected by William Schwert
(1802-1870), the Cowles Indexes (1871-1925) and
Standard & Poor's (1926-Current). The data
for the 1802-1870 period consists primarily of
bank stocks traded in Boston, New York and
Philadelphia, with additional companies added
over time. The Cowles Index Data (1871-1925)
consists of all stocks listed on the New York
Stock Exchange. The data supplied by Standard
& Poors (1926-2008) consists of the S&P
Composite Index prior to 1957, and subsequently,
the S&P 500 Index. Compound Annual Growth
Rates ("CAGR") include dividends
reinvested.
Important Disclosure
Information
The thoughts concerning
recent market movements and future prospects
for domestic smaller-company stocks are solely
those of Royce & Associates. No assurance
can be given that the past performance trends
as outlined above will continue in the future.
The historical performance data and trends
outlined are presented for illustrative
purposes only and are not necessarily
indicative of future market movements. Small-
and micro-cap stocks may involve considerably
more risk than larger-cap stocks.
The Russell 2000 is an
unmanaged, capitalization-weighted index of
domestic small-cap stocks that measures the
performance of the 2,000 smallest publicly
traded U.S. companies in the Russell 3000
index. The S&P 500 is an index of U.S.
large-cap stocks selected by Standard &
Poor’s based on market size, liquidity and
industry grouping, among other factors.CRSP
(Center for Research in Security Pricing)
equally divides the companies listed on the
NYSE into 10 deciles based on market
capitalization. Deciles 1-5 represent the
largest domestic equity companies and Deciles
6-10 represent the smallest. CRSP then sorts
all listed domestic equity companies based on
these market cap ranges. By way of comparison,
the CRSP 1-5 would have similar capitalization
parameters to the S&P 500 and the CRSP
6-10 would have similar capitalization
parameters to those of the Russell 2000.
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