19 June 2026 | Friday | News
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Global hedge funds maintained a strong appetite for technology and semiconductor companies in May, continuing a trend that has persisted throughout much of 2026 despite inflation concerns, rising energy prices, ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and questions surrounding fiscal sustainability. As global equities extended April's rally and major benchmarks including the MSCI World Index, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite closed the month near record highs, hedge funds continued to lean into growth-oriented sectors, according to Hazeltree, a leading provider of integrated treasury and liquidity management solutions for alternative asset managers.
Based on its just-published May 2026 Hazeltree Crowding Report, the firm found strong interest from hedge funds in the Magnificent Seven, with long positions in Alphabet and Apple and a decline in Meta. A movement toward shorting Amazon and Meta also took shape, with a noticeable reduction in Microsoft and Apple. Tesla continued its previous month's run as the least favored name in the group, with persistent bearish positioning, as measured by the long-to-short fund count ratio.
Semiconductor names continued to captivate hedge funds, as they provide the backbone of AI. Hazeltree tracked the PHLX Semiconductor Sector Index, which includes 30 of the largest U.S.-traded semiconductor companies, and found sentiment turning slightly more bullish, as the share of constituents exhibiting net long positioning increased from 57% in April to 60% in May. Notable takeaways included:
The monthly report provides a look back at hedge fund long and short crowding across the Americas, EMEA, and APAC, based on Hazeltree’s analysis of anonymized data from approximately 16,000 securities on its proprietary securities‑finance platform, representing more than 600 global funds. It includes the ten most crowded regional long and short positions, broken out by large-, mid-, and small-cap categories.
Hazeltree defines the crowding score as a relative metric that normalizes the number of funds in Hazeltree’s community that are long or short a given security within a predefined group (by region and market cap) relative to its peers. When a fund is long on a stock, it generally means they either expect the stock's price to go up or use longs to hedge their exposure to shorts. On the contrary, when a fund is short a stock, it generally means they either expect the stock's price to drop or are hedging their long exposure.
“Based on May global equity market activity and the activity we observed in Hazeltree’s hedge fund community, managers demonstrated more confidence that the market rally had legs despite lingering concerns about inflation, energy prices, and geopolitical tensions,” commented Tim Smith, managing director, Data Insights, Hazeltree. “We kept a close eye on semiconductor names and NXP Semiconductors' long-to-short fund count ratio nearly doubled from roughly 2:1 in April to 4:1 in May – the biggest improvement in the entire sector.”
Fintech Business Asia, a business of FinTech Business Review
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