LONDON, July 28 (Reuters) - Hedge funds fled technology
stocks at the fastest pace in 12 months in the latest week, just
as the S&P 500 reached all-time highs, a note to Goldman
Sachs ( GS ) clients and seen by Reuters said.
The S&P 500, which includes seven tech stocks in its top 10
largest constituents by market value, has surged roughly 28%
since its 2025 low, while the Nasdaq Composite has
jumped 38% in that time.
As of Friday, the S&P 500's forward price to earnings ratio,
which reflects the value of a company's stock relative to its
projected future earnings, was 23.11, around five-month highs,
according to LSEG/Datastream.
"U.S. equities valuations (such as price earnings ratios)
are now 30% higher than their recent decade average, while
10-year yields remain stubbornly high and volatile. The future
path of equities may depend partly on a decline in long-term
rates; however, we do not seem to be there yet," Lombard Odier
Investment Managers head of macro Florian Ielpo said in a note
on Friday.
Globally, hedge funds sold tech stocks, some of the most
richly valued equities, more than any other sector last week,
the Goldman Sachs ( GS ) note said.
Rather than shorting the sector, hedge funds tended to ditch
long bets and exit trades, the bank said. A short bet is
designed to profit from a drop in an asset price.
This week's exodus was the largest the bank had seen since
July 2024, Goldman Sachs ( GS ) said.
Hedge funds fleeing tech stocks centered on trading in North
America and Europe.
Every kind of tech stock was sold, including semiconductor
chip companies, as well as those in software and IT services,
the bank said.
Meanwhile, shares in consumer staples - companies that sell
items that people purchase regardless of economic conditions -
were among the most net bought U.S. stock sectors this week,
Goldman said.
Hedge funds piled into these stocks for the fourth straight
week and their trades were almost entirely long positions -
those that will profit if the stock prices rise.
The kind of companies whose shares hedge funds bought
included those that sell food and beverages and personal care
products.