Skip to content
Trending
February 22, 2025Once high-flying Bluebird Bio sells itself to private equity after tough times for the gene therapy maker December 9, 2025Euro zone inflation up a notch to 2.2% in November, flash data shows November 22, 2025Delayed September report shows U.S. added 119,000 jobs, more than expected; unemployment rate at 4.4% October 29, 2025Starbucks reports same-store sales growth for the first time in nearly two years November 8, 2025Here’s our price target and rating on Qnity, our newest stock to ride the AI chip boom November 4, 2025Fed Governor Lisa Cook, in first policy speech since Trump suit, says she’s undecided on Dec. rate cut April 27, 2025Americans are getting flashbacks to 2008 as tariffs stoke recession fears September 25, 2025Starbucks to close stores, lay off workers in $1 billion restructuring plan August 21, 2025Trump says Treasury Secretary Bessent ‘does not want’ to be Fed chair, but 4 others in running August 8, 2025Wall Street analysts rush to Eli Lilly’s defense but investors aren’t listening yet
  Wednesday 10 December 2025
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
  Finance  Trump 2.0 may create powerful tailwinds for two vastly different groups: big banks and small caps
Finance

Trump 2.0 may create powerful tailwinds for two vastly different groups: big banks and small caps

AdminAdmin—February 9, 20250

What big banks and small caps have in common right now

The Trump administration may create powerful tailwinds for two vastly different market groups: Big banks and small cap stocks.

In the case of financials, Astoria Portfolio Advisors’ John Davi predicts deregulation — along with a boost in IPO and mergers and acquisitions — to spark multi-year strength.

“The funny thing about the banks is that they were actually from an earnings standpoint fundamentally getting very attractive prior to the Trump administration,” the firm’s founder and CEO told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week. “The large-cap money centers like Goldman [Sachs], JPMorgan, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley… That’s really the area you want to hone in on with this new administration.”

The money center banks are coming off a strong week. Shares of Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley hit record highs on Friday.

Those historic gains are a major reason why Davi likes the Invesco KBW Bank ETF. Its top holdings include JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, according to FactSet.

More stories

China’s artificial intelligence boom might help mitigate some tariff pain

March 26, 2025

Fed likely to not cut rates in December following delayed September data, according to market odds

November 29, 2025

Japanese concerts in China are getting abruptly canceled as tensions simmer

November 23, 2025

Fed’s Miran sees China trade tensions as a further reason for quick interest rate cuts

October 15, 2025

The ETF is up almost 10% since Jan. 1 and more than 49% over the past 52 weeks.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

Year-to-date chart of the KBWB ETF

While bank stocks rally, VettaFi’s Todd Rosenbluth expects small cap stocks to shine under Trump 2.0. He implies the group would be largely insulated from reshoring and tariff threats.

“If we have a focus on the U.S. and making America even stronger, then small-cap companies stand to benefit from that because they have less multinational exposure,” the firm’s head of research said.

Rosenbluth suggests the T. Rowe Price Small-Mid Cap ETF and Neuberger Berman Small-Mid Cap ETF as ways investors can play the group.

He also likes the VictoryShares Small Cap Free Cash Flow ETF, which has solid exposure to biotech. Its top three holdings, according to the fund’s website, are Royalty Pharma, Oscar Health and Jazz Pharmaceuticals, and its mission statement is to target “quality small cap companies, trading at a discount with favorable growth prospects.”

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content

VictoryShares Small Cap Free Cash Flow ETF,

According to Rosenbluth, the ETF “takes a focus on companies with high quality, strong free cash flow generation, but it has a growth filter to it.” He added the filter sets a high bar when it comes to which small caps ultimately make the cut. 

The VictoryShares Small Cap Free Cash ETF is up almost 10% over the past year while the Russell 2000, which tracks the group, is up about 17%.

By CNBC “ETF Edge” Staff

Disclaimer

Consumer inflation fears spike in February as tariff worries hit sentiment
As the war on DEI intensifies, some companies hold the line while others work behind the scenes
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Finance

The Fed decision is expected to feature a rate cut and a lot more. Here’s what to expect

December 9, 20250
Finance

SoFi’s stock drops on $1.5 billion share sale announcement

December 8, 20250
Finance

$208 million wiped out: Yieldstreet investors rack up more losses as firm rebrands to Willow Wealth

December 7, 20250
Load more
Read also
Finance

The Fed decision is expected to feature a rate cut and a lot more. Here’s what to expect

December 9, 20250
Economy

Euro zone inflation up a notch to 2.2% in November, flash data shows

December 9, 20250
Earnings

Nvidia partner Foxconn reports 26% revenue spike as AI boom continues

December 9, 20250
Business

Eli Lilly to build $6 billion manufacturing plant in Alabama to help make upcoming obesity pill, other drugs

December 9, 20250
Finance

SoFi’s stock drops on $1.5 billion share sale announcement

December 8, 20250
Economy

November private payrolls unexpectedly fell by 32,000, led by steep small business job cuts, ADP reports

December 8, 20250
Load more
    © 2022, All Rights Reserved.
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions