HEDGE FLOW-Funds cut consumer stocks to global pandemic lows, Goldman data shows
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 11/10/25 06:13 AM EST*
Hedge funds increase short positions on consumer discretionary stocks
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Goldman: hedge funds' health care stock buys at 9-month high
By Nell Mackenzie
LONDON, Nov 10 (Reuters) - Hedge funds' economic
optimism faded last week and their exposure to companies that
depend on consumer spending power such as hotels and restaurants
fell to five-year lows, according to a Goldman Sachs
Companies selling products that consumers like to have but
don't necessarily need accounted for the most net-sold stock
sector globally and in the U.S. last week, Goldman Sachs
Hedge funds ditched long positions that expected the stocks of these companies to rise and added short wagers, betting these equity values would fall, said the bank.
Hedge funds are private investment funds that most often keep their trading positions a secret because of regulatory reasons and also to protect their trades.
Hotels, restaurants and leisure company stocks were the most sold in the consumer discretionary sector, which is often seen as an economic bellwether.
Exposure to these stocks now sits at the lowest level since
the 2020 COVID pandemic, the Goldman Sachs
Instead, speculators piled into U.S. health care stocks, which were bought for an eighth consecutive week and at the fastest pace in nine months, driven by an increase in long positions. Hedge fund health care enthusiasm last week saw some hedge funds investing in other hedge funds that specialise in the sector.
Global shares rose on Monday boosted by hopes that an end to the historic U.S. government shutdown was in sight.
Financial assets more commonly used as a shield for economic uncertainty, like gold, have risen following weak U.S. economic data last week. Private reports suggested the U.S. economy shed jobs in October with losses in the government and retail sectors, while businesses cutting costs and adopting artificial intelligence contributed to a surge in announced layoffs. Additionally, U.S. consumer sentiment fell to its lowest level in nearly 3-1/2 years in early November, hurt by worries over the economic fallout from the longest-ever government shutdown, a survey showed on Friday. (Reporting by Nell Mackenzie; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Hugh Lawson)
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