By Nell Mackenzie
LONDON, June 12 (Reuters) – Hedge funds sold out of the biggest U.S. tech stocks, and some even added โbearish positions, according to data from a JPMorgan note late โThursday, just before SpaceX was set to go public on Friday.
Shares in the “Magnificent Seven” — โa group that includes some of the biggest tech names on Wall Street, namely Nvidia, Apple, Amazon.com, Alphabet, Meta, Tesla, and Microsoft, have all declined since last Friday.
The Roundhill Magnificent Seven ETF, which tracks these โstocks closely, declined over 2.4% โ since June 5, with some analysts saying investors were clearing their decks in order to prepare for the โ debut of Elon Musk’s Space X on Friday.
SpaceX posted a net loss of $4.94 billion in 2025, but its landmark listing targets a valuation of $1.77 โtrillion โin a record-setting IPO, which would โmake it the seventh-biggest publicly โtraded U.S. company by market value.
Here is what the JPMorgan note said:
โข Magnificent Seven stocks saw market selling as investors decided to dial down their risk positions.
โข Some speculators jumped in to buy the dip.
โข In the U.S., software stocks were deeply sold late last week โwhile semi conductor makers garnered “strong demand.”
โข Meanwhile, โfinancial firm themed ETFs were the most โbought over the last โweek.
โข Seasonally, financial stocks do well at this time โof year
โข Hedge funds were mixed โon financials, with โsome selling banks.
โข Hedge funds recently bought insurance company stocks but overall, the sector is “heavily sold” in the year so far, โwith traders having โfar fewer wagers on these companies than in the past.
โข โFunds favoured traditional asset managers over alternative asset managers.
(Reporting by โNell Mackenzie; Editing by Amanda Cooper)