Mid-Caps Could Be the Magnificent Refuge Tech Investors Need

There was a great chart in a recent Goldman Sachs Group Inc. report that got me wondering whether medium-size companies might have superpowers. Here’s my adaptation of the original graphic1:

mid cap

The chart shows that mid-cap stocks have delivered meaningfully better cumulative returns than both the S&P 500 and small-cap stocks over the past three decades. For the mid-caps, that works out to a compound annual growth rate of more than 12%, compared with roughly 11% for the large-caps. That difference adds up over time. If you invested $100,000 in mid-caps at the end of 1994, for instance, you’d have about $3 million today — about $700,000 more than you’d have by just investing in the S&P 500. Which begs the question: Why aren’t people putting their entire equity portfolio into this stuff?

Digging a little deeper, I found that there’s indeed something to this. But predictably, there are major caveats.

As it turns out, mid-caps are the tortoise in the Tortoise and the Hare fable, and that’s borne out by both the index’s composition and the historical record. Industrials, financials and consumer discretionary shares get the biggest sector weighting in the mid-cap index (23%, 18% and 14%, respectively) while the S&P 500 is famously dominated by high-flying information technology (32%). The leading contributors to the S&P 500’s recent success are at the forefront of artificial intelligence, while the top-performing mid-caps this year include Sprouts Farmers Market Inc. and Comfort Systems USA Inc., a provider of heating and air conditioning systems.

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