Prøve GULL - 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.

- By William Baldwin

Time to Beat Apple

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.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

FLYING AHEAD

Earlier this year, flynas became the first ever listed carrier in Saudi Arabia to go public, raising $1.1 billion in its landmark IPO. Managing Director and CEO Bander Almohanna now has his sights set on further route expansion and new destinations.

time to read

7 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

The Vibe-Coding Factory

Stockholm-based LOVABLE has become the world's fastest-growing software startup, hitting over $100 million in annualized revenue in just eight months by using Al to enable millions of non-coders to instantly turn their ideas into websites, apps and online side hustles.

time to read

6 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Navigational Hazards

Even with nepotism, protectionism and infinite” liquefied natural gas, THOMAS CROWLEY JR. shows it ain’t easy being the third generation to run an American shipping company.

time to read

6 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

REDEFINING LUXURY

Noelle Homsy and Chris Nader built luxury ecolodge brand ENVI Lodges to redefine what it means to travel luxuriously and responsibly in the experiential outdoor hospitality space. Now, as they move towards closing their third funding round, bigger plans are on the horizon.

time to read

6 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

RESILIENT EXPANSION

Kamel Abou-Aly, Founder and Chairman of Pickalbatros Hotels Resorts, began building his hospitality empire in Egypt 33 years ago. With 5 billion invested at home and abroad, the group continues to expand while strengthening Egypt’s position as a global tourism hub.

time to read

7 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

TOP 100 TRAVEL & TOURISM LEADERS 2025

Despite ongoing challenges in the Middle East, the region remains a hotspot and a key global tourism hub, driven by diverse attractions the GCC and a robust pipeline of ongoing developments.

time to read

4 mins

August 2025

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

Time to Beat Apple

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.

time to read

4 mins

July 2025 English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

CAPITAL CATALYST

America’s largest bank, J.P. Morgan, is deepening its MENA footprint under Khaled Hobballah, Senior Country Officer for MENA and Head of Markets for MENA Tirkiye. As the region gains strategic weight, Hobballah is shaping how global finance flows through the fastest-growing hub.

time to read

6 mins

July 2025 English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

GLOBAL MEETS LOCAL 2025

As global corporations deepen their roots in MENA, the region continues to evolve into a magnet for investment, innovation, and cross-border collaboration.

time to read

3 mins

July 2025 English

Forbes Middle East - English

Forbes Middle East - English

EVERYTHING AI

David Meads, Vice President for the Middle East, Africa, Türkiye, Romania, and the Commonwealth of Independent States at Cisco, returned to the region last year to plug into its full tech-leading potential. With Al dominating conversations and partnerships powering growth, he's seeing fast results.

time to read

6 mins

July 2025 English

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size