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Small fry have led the market’s rebound, but can it last?

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Raise your hand if you missed the small-cap rally.

After sinking in line with the rest of the market for most of last year, shares of many small- and mid-sized companies surged in the last six weeks to spearhead the market’s year-end rebound off its late-November lows.

The small-cap burst has raised hopes that a healthier 2009 might be in store for the sector -- and the rest of the market. Smaller stocks typically take the lead in new bull markets.

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From the Nov. 20 market trough through Monday, the small-cap Russell 2,000 index zoomed 31.1% and the Standard & Poor’s 400 mid-cap index advanced 32%. The big-cap S&P 500, by contrast, climbed 23.3% in the period.

‘We had a really nice little Santa Claus rally,’ said Lori Calvasina, U.S. small- and mid-cap equity strategist at Citigroup Inc.

The year-end spurt helped small caps outperform larger shares in 2008 -- an uncommon occurrence given that smaller stocks normally lag during recessions.

For the year, the Russell 2,000 fell 34.8% versus a 37.3% tumble for the S&P mid-cap and 38.5% drop for the S&P 500.

But the small-cap rally poses a dilemma for investors who have been on the sidelines waiting to get back in: The lightning-quick recovery raises the risk that potential buyers are too late.

Small-cap stocks historically have bolted higher in the years following sharp downturns, according to research by Calvasina. The sector has notched an average gain of 51% in the 12 months after bottoming out in a recession or market panic, using data going back to the Great Depression, she said.

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So if this rebound turns out to be about average, investors already have missed more than half of it.

‘There’s a short-term risk that maybe this bounce has sort of run its course,’ said Satya Pradhuman, director of research at Cirrus Research in Tarrytown, N.Y.

Pradhuman recommends against chasing the small-cap market now. The worst isn’t over for the economy and financial system, he said. And although he believes small-cap indexes won’t drop below their Nov. 20 lows, he thinks many of the stocks could drift back to more affordable territory.

-- Walter Hamilton

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