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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
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With the U.S.-China trade war showing no resolution in sight, hedge funds are steering away from battered tech and semiconductor stocks, while bottom-fishing in health care names, according to Goldman Sachs.
The fast money continued their rotation from tech to health care, according to Goldman’s latest research looking at 835 hedge funds with $2.1 trillion equity positions. Health care has become the biggest sector exposure for hedge funds at 18% by the end of the second quarter, based on their latest regulatory filings, Goldman said.
“Funds took the policy-driven decline of Health Care stocks in 1H as an opportunity to lift the sector to the largest net overweight vs. the Russell 3000,” Goldman strategist Ben Snider said in a note on Wednesday. “Funds trimmed positions in semiconductors and other stocks exposed to US-China trade conflict.”
Health care stocks took a big hit earlier this year as political policy ideas such as Medicare for All were gaining momentum, which could hurt insurers and others in the space. Among hedge funds top new holdings are pharmaceutical company Allergan, insurers Centene, Humana, WellCare Health Plans and Walgreens, according to Goldman. Centene and Walgreens both lost more than 25% in the past six months.
Hedge funds are “largely ignoring the risk of health care regulation that garnered investor attention early this year,” Snider said. “Funds increased tilts toward Pharmaceutical and Managed Care stocks, the industries most exposed to policy risk.”
Information technology is now the most underweight sector for hedge funds as they continue to trim exposures to companies with big sales in China, chip stocks as well as U.S.-listed China internet stocks, Goldman pointed out.
Chip makers have been some of the trade war’s biggest victims as the U.S. earlier this year blacklisted Chinese telecom giant Huawei, a big buyer of U.S. chips.
“Elevated valuations and the escalating US-China trade conflict have driven hedge funds away from the Tech sector since 2017,” Snider said. “Funds have steadily reduced the share of market cap owned among the stocks most exposed to US-China trade conflict, such as semiconductors.”