Rick's Market Brief

Sunday, May 10, 2026 — Curated by Raphael for Rick Shea
S&P 500 (wk) +2.3%, fresh ATH
Nasdaq (wk) +4.5%
Dow (wk) +0.02%
Brent ~$101.3
WTI ~$95.7
Apr jobs +115K, U-rate 4.3%
CPI (Tue 5/12) ~3.7% y/y est
Trump-Xi Beijing 5/14-15

Top Story

Hedge Funds AI

Hohn's TCI Cuts $8B Microsoft Stake on AI Disruption Risk — Pivots to Alphabet, Reframes the Mag 7 Debate

FT broke it over the weekend: Sir Christopher Hohn's TCI Fund Management dumped roughly $8B of Microsoft in Q1, taking the position from ~10% of the fund to ~1%. In the investor letter, Hohn flagged "uncertainty about the company's future competitive position" — specifically that AI-native productivity stacks could erode the Office moat and parts of Azure. TCI rotated into Alphabet, lifting it from 3% to 5% and making GOOG/GOOGL the fund's largest tech holding.

Why this is the story going into Monday: TCI is one of the few activist-leaning, low-turnover concentrated funds whose moves the long-only world actually reads. Microsoft has compounded ~400% over nine years for them — exiting at this size is a thesis change, not a trim. The framing reframes the AI trade: it's not "is the capex real," it's "who in the Mag 7 is the disruptee." That's a sharper question than the bull/bear macro frame the desk has been chewing on, and it lands right as TCI-style books are finalizing 13Fs (due 5/15) and CPI hits Tuesday.

Trade reads: (1) Watch MSFT relative to GOOGL on the Monday open — TCI's letter will be cited and quant follow-ons are likely. (2) The "disruptee inside Mag 7" lens reopens single-name shorts in software incumbents that priced in AI uplift on faith. (3) For consumer/retail, the indirect read is that AI-cycle leadership rotation could pull index beta around — so factor positioning matters more this week than usual.

Hedge Fund & Investment Management

~6-minute audio brief Hedge fund + macro + regulation, narrated.
Hedge Funds Performance

April Recovery Reports Land — Point72, Millennium, Citadel, ExodusPoint All Green; Comp Outlook Modest

Weekend dispatches confirm the multi-strats clawed back March's drawdown in April: Point72, Millennium, Citadel and ExodusPoint all reported positive April months, lifting YTD back into respectable territory. Hedgeweek's 2026 comp survey, also out this weekend, projects bonus increases of 2.5–10% — flat-to-modest on a Wall Street comp backdrop, with the spread driven by alpha not beta. Translation for fundamental shops like Vardon: the pod-shop bid is back, gross is rebuilding, and the bar for keeping seat in 2026 is genuine alpha contribution rather than benchmark-hugging. Worth watching as an indirect signal on liquidity for crowded consumer/retail names that pods rotate through.

Activist Consumer

BBRC Files Proxy vs Victoria's Secret — 13% Holder Goes "Vote Against" Ahead of June 11 Meeting

Brett Blundy's BBRC International (~13% of VSCO) filed a preliminary proxy and GOLD card on May 4 urging shareholders to vote against the re-election of Chair Donna James and director Mariam Naficy at the June 11 annual meeting. BBRC's case: 25-year tenure on James, capital allocation criticism on the Adore Me deal, and broader board-oversight failures versus benchmarks. The board is fighting back hard, citing a 164% TSR since the Hillary Super CEO announcement and previous independent reviews flagging "reputational, legal, conflict of interest and governance risks" tied to Blundy himself. Active proxy contest in specialty retail with a credible 13% holder is a clean case study for any consumer book carrying VSCO or comp-set names like AEO, URBN, GPS — vote outcome and any pre-vote settlement reads through to the activist premium across the sub-sector.

Hedge Funds Consumer

WCM Dumps $940M MercadoLibre — A Q1 13F Tell on LatAm E-Comm Patience Running Out

WCM Investment Management's Q1 filing, surfaced in weekend coverage, shows a ~$940M reduction in MercadoLibre — a meaningful step-down rather than a trim. The reasoning aligned with the broader Q1 narrative: tech-sector volatility plus heavy AI capex pulling on returns for high-multiple e-commerce platforms. For consumer/retail PMs, two takeaways: (1) growth-fund patience on EM e-comm is wearing thin, and (2) when a long-time MELI bull cuts at this size, it changes the marginal-buyer profile in the name through earnings. Pair this with the Yong Rong full exit from Webull on May 4 ($32M, zero shares) — fintech-retail trims are clustering, not isolated.

Macro Setup

Week Ahead: April CPI Tuesday (~3.7% y/y est), Trump-Xi Beijing Thursday-Friday, HD/WMT On Deck

The setup for the week is unusually loaded. Tuesday: April CPI at 8:30 — Cleveland Fed nowcast ~3.56% headline, Barclays at 3.7% y/y / 0.55% m/m, ANZ at 3.9% y/y. Core forecasts are quieter (~2.6–2.7% y/y) but the energy contribution from Brent above $100 is the upside-surprise risk. Thursday-Friday: Trump-Xi summit in Beijing — trade balance, Iran, Taiwan, AI on the agenda. Background: China April exports printed +14.1% y/y (vs +2.5% in March) despite tariffs and Iran disruption, giving Xi leverage. Following week: Home Depot 5/19, Walmart 5/21 — the first real consumer-comp read of the post-tariff, post-jobs-soft cycle. Equities go in with the S&P at fresh ATHs after a 6-week winning streak, NAAIM near full-invested, and the bond market "looking through" the oil shock. Asymmetric setup: a hot CPI on top of an unhedged book is the local pain trade.

Regulation & Compliance

Regulation

SEC's Optional Semiannual Reporting (Form 10-S) — Atkins Statement Lands, Comment Window Open

The SEC's May 5 release on optional semiannual reporting on a new Form 10-S (vs the current 10-Q) is the regulation thread that buy-side desks are most actively triaging this weekend. Sidley's note out this week walks through the practical considerations: who would actually opt in, how it interacts with Reg FD, and the diligence implications when a portion of the small/mid universe goes from quarterly to semiannual disclosure. For a fundamental long/short shop, the punchline is data-cadence asymmetry — your quarterly comp set could thin out, raising the value of channel checks, alt data, and primary work in any names that take the option. Comment window is open; worth being on the record.

Regulation

Form PF Comment Window — Counting Down to June 23, Mid-Size Advisers Have the Most to Gain

Status check on the April 20 Form PF re-proposal: general filing threshold $150M → $1B AUM (cuts ~half of filers); large hedge fund adviser threshold $1.5B → $10B (cuts ~two-thirds of large filers, retains ~80%+ of HF GAV); look-through replaced with reasonable-estimate; current reporting simplified or eliminated for many categories. Comment period closes June 23. Buy-side memos kept landing through this week — for mid-sized advisers between $1.5B and $10B (i.e., real meat of the single-manager universe), this is meaningful annual cost takeout, and the comment letter is the leverage point.

Regulation

Reg S-P Compliance — Smaller Entities Hit Their June 3 Deadline; Exam Priority Confirmed

Holland & Knight reminder that smaller entities face a June 3, 2026 deadline to comply with the 2024 amendments to Regulation S-P (consumer financial data handling). The SEC has signaled compliance will be an exam priority later in the year. For Vardon's ops/compliance, this is a practical sweep: incident-response plans, vendor diligence, and the customer-notice piece all need to be tabletop-tested before exam season ramps.

AI & Alternative Investments

AI Hedge Funds

TCI's Microsoft Exit Is a Real-Money "Disruptee" Bet — Reframes the Mag 7 Inside the AI Capex Debate

Beyond the headline (covered up top), the TCI move is the most concrete "AI as disruptor of incumbents" trade by a major fundamental fund this cycle. Hohn's letter explicitly cites AI-native productivity stacks as a competitive risk to Office and parts of Azure. Pairing the Microsoft exit with a 3% → 5% Alphabet build is a clean expression: long the AI distribution platform, short (or at least not long) the legacy software incumbent that has to defend a moat. For Vardon's lens, this matters because it changes how a serious activist-leaning manager thinks about pricing AI risk inside the index — and it gives cover to fundamental shops who've been quietly underweight MSFT to articulate the same view.

AI Tools for Investment Management

What's actually new on the desk.

AI Workflow

Schwab Ships First Generative AI for Retail Clients — Anthropic Drops Finance Agents on Claude Opus 4.7

Two threads from this week worth pairing. Schwab's May 9 announcement: its first generative-AI capability for retail investor clients, designed to integrate portfolio performance, market news, and expert commentary into context for individual portfolios. Separately, Anthropic launched Claude Opus 4.7 plus a suite of pre-built financial-services agents (banking, compliance, capital markets) — and FIS announced an integration with Anthropic for an AML/Financial Crimes agent. Read the two together: the retail-side AI advisor is starting to look genuinely productized, and the institutional buy-side now has plug-in agents from a frontier model house rather than just bespoke vendor tools. The relevant question for an analyst desk is no longer "can we build this?" but "what wrappers and policies do we want before we deploy?"

AI Workflow

FINNY's "Hunter" — AI Outreach Tool for RIAs Lands in May Advisortech Roundup

Kitces' May advisortech roundup highlights FINNY's launch of "Hunter," an AI tool that automates inbound prospecting and outbound marketing campaigns for financial advisors. Less directly relevant for a hedge fund seat, but worth tracking as a signal: AI tooling is moving past research/data and into the IR + client-acquisition workflow. For single-manager funds whose IR functions have been resource-light, the same agentic pattern (lead enrichment, automated sequencing, meeting follow-up) is going to be available off-the-shelf within quarters.