Goldman Sachs notes that CTA, Retail, and Corporate investors are providing broad support for equities, with corporate buybacks in full swing. Hedge funds have increased net exposure, particularly in long/short books, while long-only investors remain neutral, with asset managers being slight net sellers of S&P futures.
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Key Numbers
9consecutive weekly gains for S&P 500
1.4%S&P 500 weekly gain
5.0%S&P 500 monthly gain
Who's Involved
Goldman Sachs
Investment bank reporting on market sponsorship and hedge fund positioning
CTA (Commodity Trading Advisors)
Investor group identified as sponsoring equities
Retail investors
Investor group identified as sponsoring equities
Corporates
Investor group conducting buybacks and sponsoring equities
Hedge funds
Increased net exposure and leverage, net buyers globally
Asset managers
Slight net sellers of S&P futures
Key facts
Goldman Sachs observes that CTA, Retail, and Corporate investors are sponsoring equities.
Corporate buybacks are noted as being in full swing.
Hedge funds increased net exposure and gross/net leverage.
Long-only investors were broadly neutral, with asset managers being slight net sellers of S&P futures.
US equity funds attracted demand, but Europe, Japan, and parts of emerging markets saw outflows.
Goldman Sachs observes that various investor types, including CTAs, retail traders, and corporations engaging in buybacks, are actively supporting the equity market. This broad sponsorship suggests strong demand for stocks, even as traditional valuation and concentration metrics might indicate caution. The S&P 500 has seen nine consecutive weekly gains, supported by strong earnings, steady inflows, retail demand, systematic buying, and aggressive buybacks.
↳ Why This Matters
Goldman Sachs observes that various investor types, including CTAs, retail traders, and corporations engaging in buybacks, are actively supporting the equity market. This broad sponsorship suggests strong demand for stocks, even as traditional valuation and concentration metrics might indicate caution. The S&P 500 has seen nine consecutive weekly gains, supported by strong earnings, steady inflows, retail demand, systematic buying, and aggressive buybacks.
FREQUENTLY ASKED
Goldman Sachs reports that CTA (Commodity Trading Advisors), Retail investors, and Corporates are sponsoring equities.
Goldman Sachs indicates that these sponsors are acting with little regard for concentration considerations or valuations.
Corporates are actively engaged in buybacks and are noted as sponsors of equities.
Hedge funds have added risk, running high net exposure and increased gross and net leverage, indicating a generally bullish stance.
Long-only investors are broadly neutral, with asset managers being slight net sellers of S&P futures and global mutual fund flows turning mildly negative.
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