Rick's Market Brief

Sunday, May 24, 2026 — Curated by Raphael for Rick Shea
S&P 500 (Fri close) 7,473.47 +0.4%
Dow (record) 50,579.70 +0.6%
Nasdaq 26,343.97 +0.2%
Week 8th straight up week
Nikkei (Fri) +2.68% to 63,339
Taiex (Fri) +2.2% record 42,267
10Y 4.56%
DXY 99.24 (6-wk high)
WTI ~$96.4
Brent $103.94
Holiday US closed Mon (Memorial Day)
~6-minute audio brief Hedge fund + macro + regulation, narrated.

Top Story

Iran/Oil Sunday Risk Event

US–Iran Peace Deal "Largely Negotiated" Into Sunday Open — Rubio Says Announcement "Possible Later Today," 60-Day Ceasefire + Strait Of Hormuz Reopening + Oil Sanctions Waivers On The Table; Futures Open Tonight Will Be The First Tell

The biggest single risk event into Tuesday's US open landed overnight. Reports out of multiple outlets through Saturday night and into Sunday morning say a US–Iran agreement to formally end the Middle East war is "largely negotiated" and could be announced as soon as today. Secretary Rubio said on Sunday an announcement "is possible later" today, while cautioning the deal is not done. Key terms reported in the draft: a 60-day ceasefire extension; Iran agreeing to clear mines and reopen the Strait of Hormuz without imposing tolls; the US lifting its blockade on Iranian ports; and temporary waivers on sanctions covering Iranian oil, gas, and petrochemical exports. The unresolved piece — and the reason the tape can't fully price it — is Iran's enriched uranium stockpile: Tehran has reportedly not agreed to immediate actions on it, with the nuclear question deferred to future talks. Iran's own NPT track ended in deadlock Saturday with Tehran calling US demands "excessive," so today is squarely a bilateral story, not a multilateral one.

For Vardon's seat the payoff matrix is unusually clean and asymmetric heading into a thin holiday week (US closed Monday for Memorial Day). The embedded $8–$15/bbl geopolitical risk premium in WTI/Brent unwinds quickly on a credible announcement — Brent's $103.94 print Friday and WTI's ~$96.4 are doing real work in every consumer-margin and rate-cut-path model on the desk. A confirmed deal pulls oil lower, takes pressure off inflation expectations (last week's UMich 5-10yr just jumped to 3.9%), opens daylight under the Fed's communication path under Warsh, and is a direct positive for the low-end consumer / off-price / big-box-staples complex. A deal collapse or last-minute Iranian walk-back re-prices oil higher, reinforces the dollar (DXY closed 99.24, six-week high) and re-tightens the consumer screw. The S&P futures and Brent/WTI Sunday-evening open is the first cross-asset tell — both reopen for Tuesday's trade date and will move on headlines through Sunday afternoon. Position-wise, the Dow's record close Friday (50,579.70, 8th straight up week) and Nikkei's +2.68% Friday rip already lean toward de-escalation being partially in the tape; the asymmetry sits in the deal failing, not the deal succeeding.

Hedge Fund & Investment Management

Berkshire Consumer/Retail

Macy's +12.2% On Berkshire's Disclosed ~$55M Stake — Abel's First 13F Initiation Is The Most-Discussed Retail Long Of The Weekend; First Berkshire Department-Store Position Since 1966

Macy's closed Friday +12.2% after Berkshire Hathaway's first 13F under new CEO Greg Abel disclosed a new ~3 million share / ~$55M position — Berkshire's first department-store holding since 1966. Coverage all weekend frames this as Abel's signature move: asset-backed retail with embedded real-estate optionality, exactly the kind of name Buffett's late-cycle book wouldn't touch. Macy's own Q1 print landed at EPS $1.67 on $7.92B revenue, sales -1.7% YoY but ahead of expectations, dividend reaffirmed at $0.1915. The company's "Bold New Chapter" strategy continues to close roughly a third of department stores by year-end while upgrading 350 locations and expanding the Bloomingdale's / Bluemercury luxury footprint. LSV Asset Management also disclosed a 26.1% Q4 stake increase. For the seat, this lands directly on Vardon's lane — the Abel initiation plus an institutional follow-on print plus a +12.2% one-day move is the cleanest "smart money is in middle-tier asset-rich retail" signal of the cycle.

Off-Price Consumer/Retail

Ross Stores Rips +8.1% On 17% Comp Blowout — Strongest Same-Store In 40-Year Company History; Raises Full-Year EPS Guide To $7.50–$7.74, Comp Outlook To 6–7%

The cleanest single-name signal from Friday's tape for the consumer/retail book. Ross Stores Q1 FY26: EPS $2.02 on $6.01B revenue, with comp-store sales +17% — the strongest same-store growth in the company's 40-year history. Management raised full-year EPS guidance to $7.50–$7.74 and lifted the full-year comp outlook to 6–7%. Stock rallied roughly +8.1% Friday; the board declared a $0.445 quarterly dividend payable June 30. The data point completes the bifurcation thesis: WMT got hit on its guide-cut/margin warning, Target Q1 came in with first comp growth in five quarters but stock dropped ~4% on income optics, and ROST blew the doors off. The trade-down to off-price by the discouraged low-end consumer is no longer a hypothesis — it's printing in same-store comps that don't lie. For Vardon's pair construction, ROST / TJX vs. middle-tier mall names remains the structural long sleeve into a record-low sentiment macro; Berkshire's Macy's print only adds a contrarian satellite to that book.

Friday Close 8th Up Week

Dow Closes At Record 50,579.70, S&P Notches Eighth Straight Up Week; Asia Rips Friday — Nikkei +2.68%, Taiex Records, Hang Seng +1%, China PMIs Beat — Setting Up A Heavy Sunday-Night Futures Open

The cross-asset setup into Sunday-night futures is the most informative of the cycle. Dow +0.6% to a new record close of 50,579.70 (its 9th record of 2026); S&P 500 +0.4% to 7,473.47, closing the eighth straight winning week (+0.88% on the week); Nasdaq +0.2% to 26,343.97. Asia ripped behind it Friday: Nikkei +2.68% to 63,339 on an overnight tech rally (SoftBank +11.89% on its ARM stake plus OpenAI IPO chatter); Taiex +2.2% to a record 42,267; Hang Seng +1%+ as China's manufacturing and services PMIs both beat for May and the PBOC cut mortgage rates a second time this year; Kospi +0.41% (Kosdaq +5%) despite a 12-session foreign-investor sell streak. Macro tape: 10Y at 4.56%, 30Y 5.07%, DXY at 99.24 (six-week high), Brent $103.94, WTI ~$96.4. What this collectively means: the tape is leaning into de-escalation and a softer-front-end story already — which is exactly why an announcement that confirms the Iran deal probably gets a modest equity follow-through, while a deal collapse re-rates oil, the dollar, and the 10Y aggressively the other way. Liquidity will be thin Monday with US closed for Memorial Day and the UK/Hong Kong also on holiday — any headline today moves bigger than it should.

Allocator Signal Consumer

Walmart Warns Of Higher Prices On Fuel Costs + Tax-Refund Drag, Two Senior Execs Exit; UK Retail Sales Drop 1.3% In April — Sharpest Since May 2025 — On Same Mid-East Fuel-Cost Channel

Two follow-through prints from the weekend that matter for the consumer book. Walmart formally warned shoppers to expect higher prices on the back of surging fuel costs and shrinking tax refunds — explicitly attributing the warning to macro pressure, not company-specific cost lines. Two long-tenured Walmart executives were also reported as departing this week, adding optics pressure on a stock already down post-guide-cut. UK retail sales fell 1.3% in April, the sharpest monthly drop since May 2025, attributed by ONS to weakened consumer confidence and elevated fuel costs tied to the Middle East conflict. Same channel, same signal, two geographies. For Vardon: this validates the causal chain the seat has been pricing — Iran → oil → fuel-cost pass-through → low-end consumer break → off-price outperformance. The chain is now visible in same-quarter retailer commentary on two continents, which is the kind of repeatable signal that holds up in allocator conversations.

13F Consumer/Retail

Late Q1 13F Reads Out: Linonia Opens $225M+ MercadoLibre Position, Aristides Adds Carter's, ShawSpring Fully Exits Shift4 — The Consumer/Retail Hedge-Fund Tape Is Stratifying

Fresh through Saturday's coverage cycle. Linonia Partnership LP opened a new MercadoLibre (MELI) position of ~130,261 shares — over $225M — clean Latin-America consumer-discretionary bet against the trade-down narrative dominating US retail screens. Aristides Capital added 90,533 shares of Carter's (CRI), ~$3.3M, a focused contrarian stake in children's apparel under retail-headwind pressure. ShawSpring Partners fully exited Shift4 Payments (~$63M) — payments names down ~50% this cycle, and that exit comes alongside Berkshire's full unwind from Visa and Mastercard, which is starting to look like a coordinated re-think on payments multiples. Delta Global divested its entire 203K-share Abercrombie position (~$19.75M), while Yong Rong (HK) sold its full 5M-share Webull stake (~$32.4M). For the consumer/retail allocator screen: the smart-money book is not long the average consumer story — it's making sharper, more discriminating bets (LatAm e-commerce, off-price, specialty value, asset-backed turnarounds) and unwinding the broader payments / mid-tier-mall / direct-to-consumer cohorts.

Regulation & Compliance

Form PF Reporting

Form PF Slim-Down Comment Window Now ~30 Days From Close (June 23) — $10B Large-HF Threshold, Section 6 PE Reporting Eliminated, Private-Credit Comment Solicited; Carlton Fields, Chapman Walk-Throughs Out This Week

Background regulatory item still anchoring the desk this weekend, with fresh practitioner walk-throughs from Chapman (May 12) and Carlton Fields surfacing in coverage. The joint SEC/CFTC Form PF amendment proposal is now in the back half of its public comment window — comments due June 23, 2026. Headline mechanics: filing threshold lifts from $150M to $1B in private-fund AUM (eliminates filing for nearly half of current filers while still covering ~94% of gross asset value); large hedge fund adviser threshold lifts from $1.5B to $10B hedge fund AUM (estimated two-thirds reduction in large-HF reporter count). Other meaningful cuts: all PE quarterly event reporting eliminated; certain feeder-fund separate reporting dropped; prescriptive "look-through" requirements replaced with reasonable estimates; identification requirements for some trading vehicles dropped; agencies also soliciting comment on whether to define and require new reporting specifically for private credit funds. The 2024 amendment compliance date remains deferred to October 1, 2026, with the new proposal modifying or replacing many of those. Agencies propose at least a 12-month transition if adopted. For Vardon: no operational change today, but private-credit-specific reporting is now a live policy question — worth flagging if any future fund structure overlays credit on the equity book.

SEC Offering Reform

SEC Sweeping Registered-Offering Reform Coverage Continues — Closed-End Funds, BDCs Get Short-Form Shelf Access; Sullivan & Cromwell, Kirkland Notes Out Late May

Fresh practitioner coverage hitting through the weekend on the late-May SEC proposal to broadly overhaul the registered-offering framework. Sullivan & Cromwell, Kirkland & Ellis, Gibson Dunn, and Ropes & Gray have all published walk-through notes in the last week. While the headline reforms target public-company offering processes, the relevant read for fund seats is the proposed expansion of short-form shelf registration eligibility to business development companies (BDCs) and registered closed-end funds, streamlining their offering process meaningfully. For any hedge fund considering a closed-end or BDC sleeve as part of a future product expansion, the cost-of-capital and time-to-market calculus changes if these reforms are adopted as proposed. Not actionable today; relevant input into any 2027 product roadmap.

AI & Alternative Investments

Macro AI Trade Rotation

Hedge-Fund Concern Over AI-Stock Decline The Dominant Allocator Conversation Into The Weekend; Aschenbrenner Trims Bloom, Re-Orients $8B+ Book To Hardware/Energy/"Neocloud"; Goldman Prime: Semis Most Net-Sold Subsector Of The Month

The week-end coverage cycle locked in a single dominant institutional concern: elevated worry over the recent slide in AI stocks, with NVDA the focal name even after a clean Q1 FY27 beat-and-raise (revenue $81.6B, Q2 guide ~$91B, $80B buyback, dividend lifted). The contrast that has hedge funds nervous: operational fundamentals look stronger than ever, but the tape took the print as already-priced. Leopold Aschenbrenner's Situational Awareness took profits in Bloom Energy and is re-orienting its AI book toward hardware, semiconductors, energy infrastructure, and "neocloud" platforms (the former-Bitcoin-miners-turned-AI-compute names: Core Scientific, Bitfarms, Bitdeer, Riot). The book still carries an $8.46B put position across NVDA, the VanEck Semi ETF, Oracle, Broadcom, and AMD. Goldman Sachs prime-broker data confirmed the broader rotation: semiconductors and semi-equipment were the most heavily net-sold US subsector of the past month, driven by long-reductions rather than fresh shorts — disciplined profit-taking, not capitulation. For Vardon's AI / alts read: the consensus AI alpha is migrating from direct chip exposure (being trimmed) to AI infrastructure plumbing (being added) — and the consumer/retail book that can credibly narrate AI-workflow integration benefits from this allocator screen.

AI Tools for Investment Management

What's actually new on the desk.

Moment AI OS

Ex-Citadel Quant Team's Moment Closes $78M Series C Led By Index Ventures — AI Operating System Now Backing $10T+ In Client Assets Across Edward Jones, LPL, Hightower; Direct Read-Through On Where Wealth/Buy-Side Plumbing Is Consolidating

The single most-covered AI-investment-tools story across May 23–24 coverage. Moment — founded in 2022 by former Citadel Securities quantitative traders and researchers — closed a $78M Series C led by Index Ventures with Andreessen Horowitz and Avra following on, bringing total funding past $100M. The platform is positioned as the AI operating system for wealth and investment management firms, embedding agentic AI for fixed-income and equities trading, portfolio management, and compliance with regulator-grade controls and a unified data model. Clients now include Edward Jones, LPL Financial, and Hightower Advisors, with the company stating it supports investment management for firms overseeing more than $10 trillion in client assets. For Vardon's seat the read is structural: the institutional buy-side and wealth distribution layer is consolidating around a small number of agentic-AI infrastructure stacks (Moment for trading-and-compliance plumbing, Arcesium Intelligence for hedge-fund-native ops, Addepar/Addison for advisor-side data and workflow). The shape of that consolidation is the right framing for "what does the AI tool stack of a 2027 single-manager hedge fund look like" — and the answer is increasingly: pick the agentic OS, don't build it.

Addepar Advisor Stack

Addepar Unveils New AI Agents + Data Tools At AddeConf26 — Data Operations Agent For Issue Triage, Addison Gets Alternatives/Private-Markets Data; Envestnet MoneyGuide Adds AI Summarization, Asset-Map Integrates Contio Meeting AI

The advisor-side AI stack got three meaningful releases in the same window. Addepar unveiled new AI agents, data connectivity features, and workflow automation at AddeConf26 (May 22), including a previewed data operations agent for identifying and resolving data issues, and material upgrades to Addison — Addepar's native AI experience — with expanded access to alternative and private-markets data plus partner integrations. Envestnet announced its second 2026 release of MoneyGuide with new AI summarization for plan notes and broader platform integration aimed at simplifying advisor workflows. Asset-Map integrated with Contio, an AI meeting operating system, letting advisors capture meeting notes and action items inside the planning tool. Add the May 8 Ezra Group report framing AI notetakers as evolving into "Agentic Operating Systems" orchestrating tasks like account-opening, tax-loss harvesting, and referral identification, and the picture is clear: the advisor stack is rapidly consolidating around agentic, multi-tool AI infrastructure. For the seat, this is the consumer-of-product side of the same trend Moment is monetizing on the institutional side.