This $2 Billion Small Cap ETF Positions Investors Away From Stretched Tech Valuations
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After a decade of Big Tech dominance that delivered strong returns to Nasdaq investors, the market may be setting up for a rotation. The WisdomTree U.S. SmallCap Dividend Fund (NYSEARCA:DES) offers a way to capture that shift while collecting income.
DES holds nearly $2 billion in assets and delivers a 2.5% yield by investing in dividend-paying small-cap companies. With just 3% exposure to information technology and heavy weightings in financials (25.6%), consumer discretionary (14.4%), and utilities (9.3%), the fund is positioned opposite the mega-cap tech stocks that have driven markets for years. The fund’s 0.38% expense ratio and moderate 28% portfolio turnover make it tax-efficient.
The Fed Pivot Could Unlock Small-Cap Value
Small-cap stocks are sensitive to interest rates, and Federal Reserve policy will be the primary driver of DES performance in 2026. Small companies typically carry more floating-rate debt than large-caps and rely heavily on bank financing. When rates fall, their borrowing costs decline immediately.
The Fed cut rates three times in late 2025, bringing the federal funds rate down from its peak. Market expectations point to one or two additional cuts in 2026, potentially bringing rates to 3% to 3.25% by year-end. This matters because many DES holdings are regional banks, utilities, and industrial companies that benefit directly from lower funding costs and improved credit conditions.
Watch the Fed’s quarterly Summary of Economic Projections and post-meeting press conferences. If officials signal confidence in inflation returning to target while unemployment remains stable, further rate cuts become more likely. Small-cap earnings growth is forecast to accelerate in 2026, and lower rates would amplify that trajectory.
Portfolio Construction: Income Now, Upside Later
DES’s top holdings reveal its dual mandate. Spire Inc (NYSE:SR), the fund’s largest position at 1.25%, is a Missouri-based natural gas utility yielding nearly 4% with a defensive beta of 0.68. Northwestern Energy, the third-largest holding, offers similar characteristics with a 4% yield and even lower volatility.
The fund also holds cyclical recovery plays like Macy’s (NYSE:M), the fourth-largest position. Trading at just 13x earnings and 0.26x sales, Macy’s represents the type of deeply discounted small-cap that could benefit if investors rotate away from expensive tech stocks. The contrast is stark: Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) trades at 37x earnings with a forward P/E of 33, while many DES holdings sit at half those multiples.
Monitor the fund’s distribution consistency through WisdomTree’s monthly fact sheets to track dividend coverage and changes in top sector allocations.
Consider SLYV for More Liquidity
The SPDR S&P 600 Small Cap Value ETF (NYSEARCA:SLYV) offers a compelling alternative with $4.1 billion in assets, more than double DES’s size. SLYV charges just 0.15% annually compared to DES’s 0.38%, and its larger asset base means tighter bid-ask spreads and better execution for larger trades. The fund yields nearly 2% less than DES but still respectable.
SLYV’s sector allocation is similar to DES, with 22.5% in financials and 16.8% in consumer discretionary. The main difference is execution cost and liquidity.
The Bottom Line
Federal Reserve rate policy will be a key factor determining whether small-caps become cheaper to finance. DES’s monthly distributions and sector allocations provide insight into whether the fund is capturing value as the market rotates away from stretched Big Tech valuations.