Hedge funds unwinding risk as in early days of COVID, Goldman Sachs says
U.S. major stock indexes plummeted on Monday, with the Nasdaq down 4%, amid fears that President Donald Trump's tariff policy will drive the world's largest economy into a recession.
'It was a classic de-leveraging crunch,' said James Koutoulas, CEO at hedge fund Typhon Capital Management.
Goldman Sachs detailed that hedge funds' sale of single name stocks was the biggest in over two years. It added some hedge funds' large de-risking moves in concentrated trades could be compared to what was seen in March 2020. It also cited January 2021, when hedge funds covered short positions in so-called meme stocks, popular among retail investors.
Hedge funds' unwinding comes at a time when leverage in the industry is at a record level. A separate Goldman Sachs note showed overall hedge funds' leverage in equity positions was at 2.9 times their books, a record level over the last five years.
Some investors told Reuters they were concerned that some high-leverage hedge fund could keep de-risking in the coming days, impeding a potential market recovery.
Hedge funds unwound long and short positions that Goldman Sachs said were crowded, or common among many investors.
Goldman Sachs saw a risk-off trend in 10 of the 11 global sectors, mainly in industrials. The risk-off trend was seen across all regions, but mainly in the U.S.
On Monday morning, before the major indexes dipped even further, equities long/short hedge funds were down 1.5%, while systematic managers were down 0.3%, according to the bank. (Reporting by Carolina Mandl, in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)

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