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2026 Q1 Quarterly Letter


To clients and friends of The London Company

 


An Unexpected Intermission

Executive Summary
  • US equity markets broadened in the first quarter of 2026 as investors shifted from mega-cap technology stocks toward a wider cast of winners.
  • This fundamental trend met a sudden intermission in March as conflict in Iran triggered a rotation into speculative names and commodity linked-industries. This backdrop mirrored the 2022 disruption which initially favored near-term narratives over fundamentals, creating a temporary headwind for quality-oriented portfolios.
  • Our Large Cap and Income Equity strategies successfully navigated the tech sell-off, while our Down Cap & International strategies trailed due largely to a structural underweight to Energy.
  • We view this period as a brief pause in a multi-year broadening cycle rather than a permanent change in the script. We continue to prioritize high-quality companies with the pricing power and financial flexibility required to deliver long-term compounding regardless of geopolitical plot twists.

 

2026 Q1 Quarterly Letter

Every compelling story has an intermission. The broadening that began in late 2025 carried encouraging signs into the first quarter of 2026 as leadership widened beyond a small cast of mega-cap technology companies. Then, the house lights came up in March. The conflict in Iran served as the intermission nobody expected and few wanted. The net effect of these cross currents resulted in 4.3% decline for the S&P 500—its worst quarterly return since 2022.

For several years, the Magnificent 7 stocks effectively owned the stage, but the spotlight began to shift in late 2025. The Magnificent 7 group declined roughly 11% on a weighted average basis in Q1, more than 2x worse than the S&P 500’s total return. Beyond these mega-caps, software companies saw their valuations compress as investors worried that rapid advancements in Artificial Intelligence might erode the moats of established firms. This retreat by large cap growth stocks allowed a much larger cast of winners to emerge.

 

2026 Q1 Quarterly Letter: % of S&P 500 Constituents Outperforming the Overall Index

Source: FactSet. Data from 12/31/22 – 3/31/26.

 

Broadening also occurred down the market cap spectrum. The S&P 500 Equal Weight index outperformed the market-cap weighted S&P 500 by 5%, a feat only achieved a handful of times over the last two decades, including early 2020/2021 and mid/late 2009. In addition, down cap indexes like the Russell Midcap, Russell 2500 and Russell 2000 all eked out modest positive returns for the quarter.

Then, in March, the broadening performance was interrupted by noise from overseas. As the conflict in Iran escalated, investors temporarily cared less about business fundamentals and more about near-term beneficiaries in energy, agriculture, and other hard-asset corners of the market. Early 2022 offered a similar lesson after Russia invaded Ukraine. In the initial aftermath, investors rushed into energy names. But beginning in Q2 2022, markets started pricing in a more dire economic situation while also refocusing on higher quality companies with greater resiliency and stronger balance sheets. We do not pretend to know the course of geopolitical events. We do know that markets often react first and think later.

 

Strategy Recap

Our relative results were mixed to start the year. Our Large Cap and Income Equity strategies thrived as the spotlight moved away from mega-cap tech. Both produced positive absolute returns, while the Core benchmarks were in negative territory, and Income Equity led the Russell 1000 Value index, exceeding expectations. Our Mid, SMID & Small Cap portfolios had a tougher quarter as speculation remained stubbornly alive and our structural underweight to Energy became a headwind. That underweight is not an accident. We prefer businesses with durable competitive advantages rather than those whose fate is tied to the price of a commodity. While this creates a headwind when energy shocks occur, we have seen this script before. In 2022, we struggled initially only to handily outperform later in the year as the market refocused on resiliency and balance sheets.

2026 Q1 Quarterly Letter - Down cap trailing returns ending March 2026

Source: eVestment. Data from 3/31/25 – 3/31/26.


The first quarter was another reminder that markets can move in ways that overwhelm fundamentals in the short run. What had appeared to be healthy high-beta mean reversion in late 2025 was largely put on pause, particularly in March. Even as high beta modestly underperformed during the selloff, lower-quality, more speculative corners of the market proved surprisingly defensive. Consider that roughly 56% of Russell Microcap constituents were unprofitable over the trailing twelve months, yet the index held up better than the higher-quality Russell Mid Cap, where only about 15% were unprofitable. Further, over the last year, Microcaps also outpaced more traditional Small Caps by nearly 2x and Mid Caps by nearly 3x. History suggests that is more sideshow than steady state.

Finally, our International Equity strategy outperformed its benchmark during the March selloff but trailed for the full quarter. This was due in part to having no exposure to Energy or Utilities, the MSCI EAFE index’s two best-performing sectors.

 

Looking Ahead

History suggests that intermissions are temporary, and we believe the broadening story hasn’t reached its final act. Prior broadening episodes have been choppy but prolonged, often lasting years rather than quarters. History also tells us that geopolitics and supply shocks, while capable of leaving a mark in the near term, rarely alter the long-term fundamentals of advantaged businesses.

 

We believe this broadening story has paused—not ended—and fundamentals will eventually return to center stage.

 

We do not attempt to forecast the direction of geopolitics or the broader economy. Instead, we focus on what we can control. We find comfort in companies with durable competitive advantages, strong returns on capital, and flexible balance sheets. These are the qualities that allow a business to navigate a wide range of economic scenarios. We believe this broadening story has paused—not ended—and fundamentals will eventually return to center stage.

As always, we appreciate and highly value the trust you have placed in us.

 

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