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Russell 2000 Index Explained — The Small-Cap Benchmark

The Russell 2000 is a stock market index that tracks the 2,000 smallest companies in the Russell 3000 Index. It is the most widely used benchmark for U.S. small-cap stocks and a key indicator of how smaller, more domestically focused companies are performing relative to large-cap giants in the S&P 500.

What Is the Russell 2000?

Created by the Frank Russell Company in 1984, the Russell 2000 is a subset of the broader Russell 3000 Index (which covers approximately 96% of the investable U.S. equity market). The Russell 3000 ranks all eligible U.S. stocks by market cap. The top 1,000 form the Russell 1000 (large-cap). The remaining 2,000 form the Russell 2000 (small-cap).

The median market cap of a Russell 2000 company is roughly $1 billion — a fraction of the S&P 500 median (~$35 billion). These are regional banks, niche manufacturers, emerging biotech firms, and small software companies. Many are names you’ve never heard of, but they collectively represent the backbone of the U.S. domestic economy.

How Is the Russell 2000 Constructed?

Unlike the S&P 500, which is committee-selected, the Russell 2000 uses a rules-based, market-cap-weighted methodology. Every year in June (the “Russell Reconstitution”), FTSE Russell re-ranks the entire U.S. equity universe and reshuffles companies between the Russell 1000 and Russell 2000 based purely on market cap.

This annual reconstitution is one of the most significant trading events of the year. Index funds tracking the Russell 2000 must buy and sell stocks to match the new composition, creating massive trading volume and often significant price moves in the days surrounding the reconstitution.

Russell 2000 Sector Breakdown

SectorApproximate Weight
Healthcare / Biotech~16%
Financials~16%
Industrials~15%
Technology~14%
Consumer Discretionary~11%
Energy~7%
Real Estate~7%
Other~14%

Russell 2000 vs. S&P 500

FeatureRussell 2000S&P 500
Companies2,000 small-caps500 large-caps
Median market cap~$1 billion~$35 billion
Selection methodRules-based (market cap)Committee-selected
Revenue sourceMostly domestic U.S.~40% international
VolatilityHigherLower
Interest rate sensitivityHigher (more debt-dependent)Lower
Popular ETFIWM (iShares)VOO, SPY

How to Invest in the Russell 2000

The most popular vehicle is the iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM), one of the most traded ETFs in the world. Other options include the Vanguard Russell 2000 ETF (VTWO) and the SPDR Russell 2000 ETF. The expense ratios on these are higher than S&P 500 funds (typically 0.19% vs. 0.03%) because tracking 2,000 small-cap stocks is operationally more complex.

Small-cap stocks have historically delivered higher long-term returns than large-caps — the so-called “small-cap premium” — but with substantially more volatility and longer periods of underperformance. Small caps tend to outperform during economic recoveries and underperform during rate-hike cycles.

Analyst Tip
Watch the Russell 2000 as a leading indicator of domestic economic confidence. Because these companies earn most of their revenue in the U.S. and rely more heavily on borrowing, the Russell 2000 tends to react earlier to changes in interest rates, bank lending conditions, and regional economic data. A divergence between the Russell 2000 and S&P 500 often signals a shift in market breadth.

Key Takeaways

  • The Russell 2000 is the primary U.S. small-cap benchmark, covering 2,000 companies with a median market cap around $1 billion.
  • It’s rules-based (not committee-selected), with annual reconstitution every June.
  • Sector mix is more balanced than the S&P 500 — less tech-heavy, more financials and industrials.
  • The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) is the most liquid way to get small-cap exposure.
  • Small caps are more volatile and domestically focused — they react strongly to interest rate changes and U.S. economic data.

Frequently Asked Questions

What qualifies a stock for the Russell 2000?

A stock must be in the bottom 2,000 of the Russell 3000 by market cap. The Russell 3000 includes the 3,000 largest U.S.-listed stocks, so the Russell 2000 essentially captures ranks 1,001 through 3,000. The cutoff market cap fluctuates but is typically between $300 million and $5 billion.

What happens during the Russell Reconstitution?

Every June, FTSE Russell re-ranks all U.S. stocks. Companies that have grown too large get promoted to the Russell 1000, and companies that have shrunk get demoted to the Russell 2000 (or dropped entirely). This triggers massive index fund rebalancing — one of the highest-volume trading events of the year.

Do small-cap stocks outperform large-cap stocks?

Historically, yes — the “small-cap premium” has been documented across decades and multiple countries. However, the premium is inconsistent. Small caps can underperform for extended periods (including much of 2020–2024) and carry significantly more risk and volatility.

Why is the Russell 2000 considered a domestic economy indicator?

Russell 2000 companies earn roughly 80% of their revenue from the U.S., compared to about 60% for S&P 500 companies. This makes the index more sensitive to U.S. GDP growth, consumer spending, and domestic lending conditions — and less affected by currency fluctuations or international trade dynamics.

What is the Russell 2000 Value vs. Growth split?

FTSE Russell divides the Russell 2000 into two style indexes: the Russell 2000 Value and Russell 2000 Growth, based on price-to-book ratios and earnings growth expectations. These sub-indexes are widely used by fund managers who specialize in value or growth small-cap investing.