The Avantis U.S. Small Cap Value ETF (NYSEARCA:AVUV) is having the kind of year that small-cap value advocates have been promising since 2021. AVUV is up 23% year to date and 39% over the past 12 months, beating the Russell 2000 by roughly two points and outpacing the passive small-cap value benchmark by a wider margin. With roughly $23.5 billion in net assets, AVUV is now the dominant active vehicle in this corner of the market, and the next 12 months will test whether the rally has another leg.
The setup heading into the second half
AVUV’s portfolio leans hard into the parts of the market that respond most violently to interest rates and consumer spending. The fund’s largest positions include Five Below at roughly 1%, GATX near 0.9%, and Avnet around 0.8%, with deep representation in regional banks, energy producers, and specialty retail. That mix has worked because the Fed cut 75 basis points between September and December last year, lowering the funds rate to 3.75%, then paused. Small caps got the relief; now they need the next move.
The macro factor that matters most: the Fed’s next decision
The single most important variable for AVUV over the next year is whether the Fed resumes cutting before September. The fund’s heavy exposure to leveraged small-cap balance sheets, financials like Axos Financial, Bank OZK, and Bread Financial, and rate-sensitive consumer names means another 50 basis points of easing would lower refinancing costs and steepen the yield curve favorably for net interest margins. The funds rate has held at 3.75% for six months, and the 10-year Treasury is near 4.4%, close to its 12-month average.
Watch the CME FedWatch tool and the dot plot updates that accompany each FOMC meeting. The specific threshold to monitor: if futures pricing for a September cut falls below 50%, small-cap value historically gives back gains quickly. If a cut gets pulled forward to July, expect AVUV’s regional bank and consumer discretionary sleeves to lead.
The fund-specific factor: consumer discretionary concentration meets tariff risk
What separates AVUV from broader small-cap value vehicles is its concentrated bet on consumer discretionary names carrying real tariff exposure. American Eagle Outfitters (NYSE:AEO | AEO Price Prediction) is guiding to a 10% tariff rate in Q2 and 15% in the back half. Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE:ANF) initially modeled a 70 basis point headwind, since revised to roughly 20 basis points. Academy Sports & Outdoors (NASDAQ:ASO) flagged trade policy as a headwind even as it raised its full-year guide to $6.40 to $6.80 in adjusted EPS.
The transmission mechanism is direct. AVUV owns roughly 6.3 million shares of AEO and 1.3 million shares of ANF, and the consumer discretionary cluster collectively represents a meaningful slice of the portfolio. Consumer sentiment just printed 44.8 in May, a recessionary reading, while retail sales hit $763.7 billion, a 12-month high. That divergence cannot last forever. Track the monthly Census Bureau retail sales release and quarterly tariff commentary from these holdings.
The alternative if your view differs
If you want small-cap value exposure without the active profitability tilt that has driven AVUV’s outperformance, Vanguard Small-Cap Value ETF (NYSEARCA:VBR) offers a cheaper, more diversified index alternative. VBR is up 16% year to date, materially behind AVUV, but with less single-stock concentration and lower turnover. The iShares Russell 2000 ETF covers the broader small-cap universe without the value screen.
What to watch
The two signals that matter: the September FOMC decision, and the back-to-school tariff commentary from AEO, ANF, and Bread Financial in August earnings. A September cut paired with mitigated tariff impact extends AVUV’s lead. A Fed hold paired with margin compression at the consumer names is when the rotation reverses.