Intentar ORO - Gratis
Time to Beat Apple
Forbes Middle East - English
|July 2025 English
Small value stocks haven't been doing well. But money manager MILES LEWIS makes the case that at a time of turbulence on Wall Street, they are ready for a rebound.
Tariffs. Inflation. Economic chaos.
Bring it on, says Miles Lewis, manager of a portfolio of quirky stocks that, he says, are better equipped than the average stock to weather a tumultuous time in the U.S. economy.
Recession? That should send shoppers for sporting goods out of high-class vendors to the downmarket chain he favors. Rising interest rates? A steeper yield curve would benefit the venerable savings bank in which Lewis has a stake. Economic uncertainty? That will make it hard for municipalities to sell bonds, so they will be patronizing a bond insurer he likes.
Lewis runs $1.5 billion, most of it in the Royce Small-Cap Total Return Fund. A story goes with each of the fund’s 60 stocks, but there’s also a big-picture bullish case. Small companies are more domestically oriented than the multinationals in the S&P 500. “They're more insulated from retaliatory tariffs and deglobalization,” Lewis says.
Another tailwind might come from the fact that stocks like the ones Lewis holds are overdue for a rebound. In the 16 years since the financial crisis, Wall Street’s winners have been big growth companies. The money management firm created 53 years ago by Charles Royce is in the opposite corner of the market.
The companies in Small-Cap Total Return average a market value a thousandfold smaller than that of Apple. They are cheap, too, trading at a collective 13 times trailing earnings, to 21 for the S&P (both calculations omit companies losing money). It would be better for Lewis if his stocks weren't quite so cheap. Like most of what's in the Royce lineup, his fund can, net of its 1.2% annual fee, boast of benchmark-beating returns since inception (for this fund, in 1993). But that’s not good enough. When investors compare the results not to an index of small value stocks but to the S&P 500 they feel they are missing out.
Esta historia es de la edición July 2025 English de Forbes Middle East - English.
Suscríbete a Magzter GOLD para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9000 revistas y periódicos.
¿Ya eres suscriptor? Iniciar sesión
MÁS HISTORIAS DE Forbes Middle East - English
Forbes Middle East - English
CAPITAL IN TRANSITION
As Saudi Arabia diversifies beyond oil, capital is moving into new sectors. For Saudi billionaire Ajlan Abdulaziz Alajlan, Chairman of Ajlan & Bros Group, that shift is already shaping his strategy.
5 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
THE MIDDLE EAST'S MOST IMPACTFUL REAL ESTATE LEADERS 2026
Sajwani founded DAMAC Properties in 2002. In 2025, DAMAC reported $9.8 billion in sales.
2 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
The Youngest Arab Billionaire In 2026
Unlike developers who scale through long-term, phased masterplans, Abbas Sajwani, Founder and CEO of AHS Properties, focuses on acquiring, repositioning, and monetizing high-value assets in Dubai's ultra-luxury commercial and residential market.
2 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
THE WORLD'S RICHEST ARABS 2026
36 billionaires across seven countries, with a combined net worth of $137.3 billion
1 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
BUILDING BEYOND BRICKS
Waleed Mohammad Al Zaabi, founder and owner of Tiger Holding, has built skyscrapers across the Middle East and grown a business that now spans construction, real estate, hospitality, engineering, education, facilities management, and industrial services.
7 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
PLANNING BOLDLY, NAVIGATING MARKET SHIFTS
Ahmed Al Ammadi, CEO of Diyar Al Muharraq, is leading one of Bahrain's largest and most active master-planned communities-spanning 12 square kilometers-through shifting market dynamics and regional uncertainty.
6 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
TOP 10 CONSTRUCTION COMPANIES 2026
The Middle East's construction sector continues to expand, driven by major infrastructure and real estate projects. This year's list of The Middle East's Top 10 Construction Companies 2026 highlights firms with a strong track record of project execution, solid financial performance, and multi-billion-dollar project backlogs.
4 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
HOW CULTURE BECAME A CORE ASSET
With the $1 billion Grand Egyptian Museum opening, drawing an average of 19,000 visitors per day, it's clear that culture is no longer a decorative afterthought. As cities compete for capital, talent, and global relevance, it has become a core economic engine.
4 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
THE HUMAN BLUEPRINT BEHIND A LUXURY PROPERTY EMPIRE
Masih Imtiaz, CEO of family-run business Imtiaz Developments, defied Dubai's high-velocity real estate playbook by putting empathy at the center.
5 mins
April - May 2026 English Edition
Forbes Middle East - English
The World's Celebrity Billionaires
From newcomer Roger Federer to Oprah Winfrey, here are the 22 athletes and entertainers who have translated their fame into ten-figure fortunes.
1 min
April - May 2026 English Edition
Listen
Translate
Change font size
