The stock market has broadened in a way many investors have been waiting years to see. While artificial intelligence has helped create more than a dozen trillion-dollar companies and kept mega-cap technology stocks in the spotlight, smaller companies have quietly staged an even stronger comeback.
Over the past 12 months, the Russell 2000 has gained 33.8%, comfortably ahead of the S&P 500‘s 20% return. That’s an encouraging sign for investors because healthy bull markets typically expand beyond just a handful of market leaders. Yet this rally has unfolded despite one major obstacle that refuses to go away: high interest rates.
Small Caps Are Winning Despite a Major Headwind
What makes this rally so surprising is that smaller companies rely far more heavily on borrowing than their large-cap counterparts. Unlike the largest corporations, they often lack the cash reserves, credit ratings, and financing options that allow them to shrug off higher borrowing costs.
That makes today’s interest-rate environment especially challenging. According to data from Bloomberg and Apollo Global Management, interest expense now consumes 31% of EBITDA for Russell 2000 companies, the highest level in at least six years. Just five years ago, that figure was roughly half as large.
The contrast with large-cap companies is striking.
| Metric | Russell 2000 | S&P 500 |
| Interest expense as % of EBITDA | 31.0% | 6.7% |
| Interest expense in 2020 | 14.8% | 9.5% |
| Debt tied to floating interest rates | ~30% | ~7% |
| Companies that remain unprofitable | +40% | ~6% |
Those numbers help explain why many investors expected small caps to struggle until the Federal Reserve began lowering rates. Instead, they’ve produced one of the market’s strongest performances anyway.
Higher for Longer Changes the Equation
Unfortunately for small-cap investors, the backdrop appears to be shifting again.
Markets spent much of the past year expecting multiple Federal Reserve rate cuts. Those expectations have steadily faded as inflation has remained stubborn and economic growth has proven stronger than anticipated. Some investors are now beginning to price in the possibility that rates could remain elevated well into next year — or even rise further if inflation reaccelerates.
That matters because roughly 30% of Russell 2000 corporate debt carries floating interest rates, according to Bloomberg and Apollo. Every increase in benchmark rates pushes borrowing costs higher almost immediately for many of these businesses.
Granted, not every small-cap company is financially fragile. Many have strong balance sheets and healthy cash generation. But nearly 40% of Russell 2000 companies are still unprofitable. Those businesses depend on affordable financing to fund expansion, invest in new products, or simply bridge periods of weaker earnings. Higher rates make each of those tasks more difficult.
Ironically, the very companies that have led this year’s market broadening remain among those most exposed to Federal Reserve policy.
The Rally Depends More on the Fed Than Investors Think
The Russell 2000 has demonstrated impressive resilience by outperforming the S&P 500 while carrying much heavier interest burdens than large-cap peers. That strength suggests investors are looking beyond today’s financing costs and betting on improving earnings, stronger economic growth, and eventually lower interest rates.
If those rate cuts never materialize — or worse, if the Federal Reserve is forced to tighten policy again — that thesis becomes much harder to defend. Higher borrowing costs would pressure profits, limit hiring, reduce capital investment, and make refinancing existing debt more expensive across much of the small-cap universe.
Key Takeaway
In short, the Russell 2000’s 33.8% gain shows that small-cap stocks have regained investors’ attention despite operating in one of the toughest financing environments in years. That resilience deserves recognition.
However, the numbers also reveal how dependent many smaller companies remain on lower borrowing costs. With interest expense consuming 31% of EBITDA and nearly one-third of corporate debt tied to floating rates, a “higher for longer” Federal Reserve — or an outright rate hike — could interrupt the small-cap revival just as momentum has returned.
Smart investors should continue watching Fed policy as closely as corporate earnings because, for many small-cap companies, the next move in interest rates may matter just as much as the next quarter’s results.
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