The week ended with a sharp risk-off reversal of Thursday's melt-up. The S&P 500 closed at 7,408.50 (-1.24%) Friday; the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.54% to 26,225.14. The proximate cause: disappointment with the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing (May 13–15). The announced Boeing deal came in at 200 aircraft versus an expected ~500, ag-purchase commitments lacked Beijing confirmation, and readouts on Taiwan, AI export controls, and trade went nowhere concrete. Politico called it “big promises, thin results.”
The macro reacted hard. WTI crude jumped $4.25 on the day to ~$105.42 (Brent ~$110), the 10-year yield surged to 4.59% and the 2-year to 4.09% on persistent inflation worries (the April CPI 3.8% print is still in the bloodstream), and the dollar firmed — DXY at 99.27, WSJ Dollar Index +1.27% on the week to 95.88. So you had everything moving the wrong way for equities simultaneously: weaker geopolitical tailwind, higher oil into pre-summer demand, higher real yields, stronger dollar pressuring multinationals.
Consumer/retail reads for the seat: (1) The fuel-price surge is the single biggest wedge into next week's HD (Tue), TGT (Wed), WMT (Thu) prints — discretionary read-throughs on guidance get materially tougher with WTI through $105; expect cautious 2H commentary, especially from Target and the broadlines. (2) Pantheon Macro published yesterday that April retail-sales strength was likely temporary as tax refunds fade and pump prices bite — that's now the bear-case template in print. (3) Berkshire's 13F (filed yesterday at the May 15 deadline) added Macy's (M) — a notable signal for beaten-up legacy retail, though Buffett also exited Amazon, Visa, Mastercard, Domino's, and Pool Corp. (4) Across the broader 13F universe, hedge funds were net buyers of consumer staples at $3.4B — highest since S&P Global began tracking — and net sellers of consumer discretionary. The defensive rotation is real and was already in motion before Friday's tape.
The 13F deadline hit yesterday (May 15) and Berkshire Hathaway dropped the headline-grabbing filing. Buffett added Macy's (M) — the first “new” consumer-retail position in a while — while fully exiting Amazon (AMZN), Visa (V), Mastercard (MA), Domino's Pizza (DPZ), Pool Corp (POOL), and UnitedHealth (UNH). Coca-Cola (KO) moved up to the third-largest position, Kraft Heinz (KHC) stayed top-ten. New initiated position in Delta (DAL); added to Alphabet (GOOGL). The read for the consumer/retail seat is the rebalancing pattern: out of payment-rails and out of premium discretionary, into beaten-up legacy retail (Macy's) and staples/utility (KO). It's the Buffett version of the broader Q1 rotation message — staples were the largest net buy across pure-play hedge funds at $3.4B (highest since S&P Global began tracking), discretionary was a “meaningful detractor.”
From yesterday's 13F dump: Pershing Square (Ackman) opened a new ~5.65M-share Microsoft position worth ~$2.09B (started in February on the pullback) while gutting Alphabet (Class C from 6.1M to 311k shares) and exiting Hilton (HLT) entirely. Cuts to Uber and Meta too. Appaloosa (Tepper) added Amazon and Micron, took a new position in SanDisk (SNDK), and fully exited American Airlines, United, and Mohawk Industries. Third Point (Loeb) did the opposite trade to Ackman — sold its entire Microsoft stake (held since late 2022) and bought 175k shares of Alphabet. Both Pershing and Third Point opened new Meta positions. Third Point's flagship was -0.6%/-0.3% in Q1 on $24.1B AUM. The dispersion among brand-name funds on the same names (MSFT/GOOGL) is the tell: nobody is comfortable on mega-cap tech right now, and the 13F mosaic mostly tells you who got the “AI capex digestion vs. consumer-AI monetization” sequence right.
From the broader Q1 13F sweep: Starboard Value opened new positions in CarMax (KMX) and Lamb Weston (LW) — a classic activist setup at two operationally-troubled consumer names, both at depressed multiples. David Einhorn's Greenlight Capital added Spectrum Brands Holdings (SPB), a branded home-essentials play, to its consumer-defensive sleeve. Renaissance Technologies exited Amazon and opened a new Apple position. Nicholas Investment Partners trimmed Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF). The pattern across these filings is consistent: hedge funds spent Q1 rotating out of mega-cap consumer leadership (Amazon, Visa/MA, premium discretionary) and into beaten-up specialty names with activist/operational catalysts. For a consumer fundamental L/S seat, the Starboard prints in KMX and LW are the most actionable read — these are now “watched” names heading into Q2 reporting.
Next week is the consumer-retail super-week. Home Depot reports Tuesday May 19 (Street: $3.42 EPS / $41.64B rev); Target reports Wednesday May 20 (Street: $1.34-$1.41 EPS / $24.28-$24.51B rev, prior quarter was a $2.44 beat); Walmart reports Thursday May 21 (Street: $0.65 EPS / ~$174.1B rev, with 27% e-commerce growth and a profitable e-com quarter pattern). Friday's $4 spike in WTI plus the dollar firming meaningfully changes the guide bar. Watch for: (1) HD on housing/comps with mortgage rates resetting higher; (2) TGT on the discretionary mix and whether the prior beat extends; (3) WMT on the trade-down dynamic, Walmart Connect ad revenue, and grocery-share commentary as fuel takes more of consumer wallet. Pantheon Macro's note out yesterday calling April retail strength “temporary” will be the bear-side template every analyst leans on.
Two consumer-discretionary single-name items out yesterday worth tracking. Starbucks announced ~300 U.S. corporate layoffs and closures of several regional corporate offices as part of its turnaround plan. The cut isn't large enough to move the model materially, but combined with the “higher fuel = discretionary pinch” backdrop, it's a confirming data point that even the premium-cup consumer is being managed for slower trips. Separately, Amazon was hit with a proposed class-action filed May 15 seeking refunds for tariff costs allegedly passed to consumers, after the recent SCOTUS ruling deemed those Trump-era tariffs illegal. The legal exposure is uncertain and probably small relative to AMZN's float, but it's a developing overhang to track — and a reminder that the tariff unwind narrative still has live consumer-litigation tails.
Three fresh SEC enforcement matters surfaced in the last day, all relevant to private-fund seats. (1) SEC charged Berone Capital and its principals Jeremiah Beguesse and Fabian Stone with misappropriating assets from their managed hedge fund (Berone Capital Fund LP). The fund held investor money for two of three fraudulent high-yield programs run by Reign Financial; total scheme raised >$26M from at least 31 investors 2021-2022. Allegations include luxury cars, jewelry, private-jet travel funded with fund cash. (2) SEC charged 21 individuals in a decade-long insider trading scheme that misappropriated confidential information from multiple global law firms, with parallel criminal charges from the U.S. Attorney's Office for Massachusetts. (3) Fund manager Robert Newell agreed to a $1.59M settlement over an alleged $37.7M cannabis-fund Ponzi (Black Hawk Funding). New SEC Enforcement Director David Woodcock continues his “back to basics” framing: private-fund misconduct (valuation, fees, liquidity, conflicts), offering frauds, and insider trading. For a registered HF, the operative question is whether internal information-barrier policies would have caught any of these patterns — worth a CCO check-in.
Reminder on the joint SEC/CFTC proposal to slim Form PF (issued April 20, 2026): general filing threshold proposed to move from $150M to $1B AUM, eliminating filing requirements for ~50% of current filers. The “large hedge fund adviser” threshold (quarterly filing + detailed reporting) proposed to rise from $1.5B to $10B. The proposal also kills or simplifies a long list of event-driven disclosures, feeder-fund reporting, look-through rules, vehicle identification, performance-volatility reporting, and certain trading/clearing items. Comment period closes June 23, 2026. Note that the prior 2024 amendments — which expanded reporting — are still in force with a compliance date of October 1, 2026; if the new proposal is adopted, expect a minimum 12-month transition (late 2027 effective at earliest). For Vardon-sized shops, the cost-benefit on commenting is meaningful: smaller HFs in the $150M-$1B band have the biggest upside from adoption and should consider a comment letter through industry groups.
HedgeCo this week: mega-funds are now systematically using AI agents to rebuild the “analyst edge” in real time across earnings prep, expert-network synthesis, and continuous monitoring. Combined with the Hedgeweek baseline data (47%+ of mid-large HFs running at least one production GenAI system as of Q1 2026), the gap between “AI-native” and “AI-curious” shops is now measurable in research throughput per analyst, not just narrative. The mid-sized fundamental shop implication is unchanged but more urgent: the next 18 months are infrastructure-catch-up or structural alpha-decay vs. multi-strat peers. There is no middle option, and the cost of waiting is rising every quarter.
The private-credit-into-DC narrative continues to develop alongside live BDC stress. Bloomberg Law: BlackRock and KKR are publicly addressing performance issues in their troubled BDCs; top-tier BDC managers continue delivering 9-13% TTM, but dispersion across the cohort is widening. PGIM's first private-credit CIT for the DC market (announced this week) is the supply-side answer to the next leg of AUM growth as institutional private-credit hits its first real stress cycle. For allocators evaluating alt-credit exposure right now: vintage matters less than manager due-diligence quality, and the GP-LP information asymmetry is at its widest in years. Worth flagging in any quarterly LP review where Vardon's seat touches private-credit sleeves.
What's actually new on the desk.
Vestmark launched Pulse this week (announced May 12, broadly covered May 15): an AI intelligence layer for wealth managers running on a platform that manages over $2T AUA. Pulse continuously monitors portfolio positions, SEC filings, market events, and CRM data; surfaces suggested actions (rebalance, tax-loss harvest, concentration breaches, event-triggered outreach) inside the existing Vestmark workflow with one-click execution. CTO Freedom Dumlao framed the differentiator correctly: the gap in wealth-management AI isn't information, it's action. For investment-management ops watching this category, Pulse is now the reference design for “agentic operating system” — monitor-recommend-execute in one loop, not three separate dashboards.
InvestmentNews this week: FinTurk, an AI-powered CRM built specifically for financial advisors, launched with an $8B RIA as anchor client. Founded by a frustrated former advisor, it combines portfolio management, workflow automation, and AI-generated client insights/task recommendations in one customizable system. The angle that matters: this is the second AI-native advisor CRM (after Altitude/Pathfinder+) to ship with serious anchor clients in a quarter — the legacy vendors (Wealthbox, Practifi, Advisor360, Nitrogen, Altruist Hazel) are now bolting AI onto existing rails, while the new entrants are building the rails AI-first. For institutional managers thinking about how SMA distribution gets re-platformed, this is the leading edge — worth one product call to understand what advisor-side AI tooling looks like underneath the hood.