- Goldman Sachs prime brokerage data shows hedge funds purchased US equities at the fastest pace in six months last week, driven by long buys and short covering across index products and ETFs
- Financial stocks were the biggest beneficiary, attracting the largest net buying in nearly six months — long purchases outpaced short sales 6.5-to-1, led by payments stocks and, to a lesser extent, banks
- US long/short net leverage rose to 55.3%, reaching the 89th percentile on a one-year basis; the US fundamental long/short ratio hit the 99th percentile — signaling near-maximum risk appetite
- Industrials were the outlier: net sold for seven of the last eight weeks, with short exposure reaching the 90th percentile, mostly driven by new shorts rather than long liquidation
What Happened?
Goldman Sachs’s prime brokerage desk reported that hedge funds made a decisive pivot back into US equities last week, buying at the fastest pace in six months. The flows were driven by a combination of long additions and short covering — particularly in index products and ETFs, where short positions in US-listed ETFs fell for a second consecutive week. The rotation into financials stood out: payments stocks led the charge, with long buys outpacing short sales by 6.5 to one. This is a notable reversal from just two weeks earlier, when the same Goldman desk reported that hedge funds had taken profit on chip stocks and added macro shorts amid rising inflation prints and bond-yield pressure.
Why It Matters?
Hedge fund positioning data is one of the cleanest reads on institutional conviction available in real time. The shift from defensive to aggressively long in the span of two weeks reflects a market that has rapidly repriced the risk outlook — the Iran ceasefire deal progress, blockbuster chip earnings, and Anthropic’s first operating profit collectively turned the macro narrative from “inflation and war risk” to “AI earnings acceleration.” The leverage data reinforces the message: at the 89th percentile on a one-year basis, hedge funds are not hedging — they are long. The financials rotation is particularly interesting: Goldman notes that allocations remain near five-year lows in the 1st percentile, meaning the sector has enormous room to normalize upward if the macro environment stays constructive. The industrial short-selling streak — seven of eight weeks — is the contrarian data point, suggesting funds remain skeptical of capex-heavy cyclicals even as tech soars.
What’s Next?
At the 99th percentile on the fundamental long/short ratio, hedge funds have limited room to add more risk. That creates a vulnerability: when positioning is this stretched, even a minor negative catalyst — a hot inflation print, a Hormuz incident, a hawkish Fed signal — can trigger outsized selling as funds simultaneously cut exposure. The next major catalyst is the Iran deal: a successful agreement would likely push funds to add further, while a breakdown could trigger rapid de-leveraging from historically elevated levels. Watch the Goldman prime brokerage weekly reports closely; they have been among the most reliable leading indicators of short-term market direction throughout this cycle.
Source: Bloomberg













