Quant Hedge Funds Suffer Losses Amid 'Garbage Rally'

Monday, Aug 4, 2025 5:41 am ET1min read

Quant equity hedge funds have experienced losses in June and July due to a "garbage rally" attributed to retail day traders. This is unprecedented as previous meme stock rallies were driven by medium-term retail investors and previous quant hedge fund losses were steeper but shorter-lived. The losses are primarily affecting short positions, with the Goldman Sachs Group's most shorted-stocks basket surging at a near-record pace. If the trend continues, it could have broader market effects.

Quant equity hedge funds have experienced significant losses in June and July, primarily due to a phenomenon known as the "garbage rally," attributed to retail day traders. This unprecedented event has caused notable disruptions, particularly affecting short positions, with the Goldman Sachs Group's most shorted-stocks basket surging at a near-record pace [1].

The "garbage rally" refers to a situation where stocks considered low-quality or "garbage" by quant equity factor investing strategies have seen a sudden and sustained increase in price. This is unusual because previous meme stock rallies were driven by medium-term retail investors, and previous quant hedge fund losses were steeper but shorter-lived [2].

Most factor sets in quant equity investing include a quality factor that buys stocks in profitable, growing companies and shorts stocks in low-profit or money-losing companies. The recent rally has seen these "garbage" stocks rallying strongly, inflicting losses on funds that were short these stocks. The pattern of the increases shows the fingerprints of retail day traders, who trade during the day and usually take off positions overnight [1].

The effect is seen only in US stocks, and the patterns in order sizes and timing suggest retail rather than institutional buying. However, unlike previous times when retail investors have generated measurable market-wide effects, there’s no evidence on social media of a viral theme. This suggests that perhaps the retail day-trader story is wrong or their behavior has changed [1].

If the garbage rally continues, it could have broader market effects. For now, it seems to have affected only quant equity fund investors and whoever is fueling the gains. The most likely resolution is that the garbage rally runs out of steam and the junk stock prices sag back. The nimble traders who took daily profits will keep their winnings, the quant funds will make back their losses, and the losers will be less nimble day traders and medium or long-term investors who overpaid for junk [1].

While it seems unlikely that the garbage rally will lead to a quant equity crisis, the longer it persists without a clear reason, the greater the chance of a significant market-wide impact. The financial world seems to have its house in order, but the longer the rally continues, the greater the risk [1].

References:
[1] https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2025-08-04/hedge-funds-are-hurting-from-a-garbage-rally-who-s-to-blame
[2] https://www.barchart.com/story/news/33750426/what-makes-a-meme-stock-online-enthusiasm-for-a-beaten-down-company-with-doubtful-prospects

Quant Hedge Funds Suffer Losses Amid 'Garbage Rally'

Comments



Add a public comment...
No comments

No comments yet