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The Russell 2000 just closed at a record high, topping its previous high in 2021. And it’s also on track for its seventh straight week of gains, which hasn’t happened since 2020.
All thanks to interest rate cuts, and the potential for another two this year.
In fact, history shows that rate cuts often give small caps a boost. Part of the reason for that is these companies often rely on debt, and will therefore benefit from lower borrowing costs. Plus, they’ll have easier access to capital, boosting potential profitability. Some argue that small caps are some of the strongest beneficiaries of rate cuts.
Seeing that we may get another two cuts this year, investors may want to jump into hot small cap stocks, or even jump into exchange traded funds (ETFs) such as:
Vanguard Small-Cap ETF (VB)
With an expense ratio of 0.05%, the Vanguard Small-Cap ETF tracks the performance of the CRSP US Small Cap Index. It also holds 1,336 stocks, some of which include SoFi Technologies, NRG Energy, Atmos Energy, Reddit Inc., and Pure Storage.
Even better, it pays a quarterly dividend. On July 2, it paid a dividend of just over 78 cents. Before that, it paid a dividend of just over 91 cents on March 31.
Granted, the ETF did just rocket from about $190 to $258.56, but with more interest rate cuts on the way, it could test higher highs.
One of the most important reversal candlesticks is the Doji. A doji is characterized by opening and closing prices that are identical (or virtually identical). The ideal doji, with the same opening and closing price, has a real body that is a horizontal line. However, in the real world a difference of a few ticks doesn’t diminish the doji’s importance. Precisely how large the real body can be before the candlestick is no longer a doji is a somewhat subjective matter. In context, though, a doji is what looks like a doji. And the more it looks like a doji the more powerful a reversal signal it is likely to be.
Below are three variations on the doji candle. The long-legged doji is especially powerful, because the battle between the bulls and the bears has been all over the map during that period. They’ve taken it high; they’ve taken it low. Each side has pressed the offensive and then retreated with its tail (bovine or ursine) between its legs. And in the end both sides are frustrated.
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