Goldman Sachs's High Beta Momentum Basket suffered its worst two-day drop since 2020, falling 18% as liquidity contraction, crowded positioning and seasonal weakness triggered a violent unwind.
Goldman Sachs's High Beta Momentum Basket tumbled 18% over two sessions, the steepest decline since 2020, after the bank warned hours earlier of a summer slump.
"The selloff reflects a perfect storm of elevated positioning, low liquidity and quarter-end rebalancing," said Guillaume Soria, a strategist at Goldman Sachs.
The basket has now fallen 24% from its peak, the largest drawdown since the first quarter of 2023 and double the historical average of about 12%. The average correction typically lasts 24 days; the current rout is only 10 days old. Factor volatility has climbed to a five-year high. The move was amplified by holiday-weekend liquidity contraction, quarter-end portfolio rebalancing pressure and the unwind of substantial unrealized gains built up during a strong first half, Soria said. The selloff has shown global reach — South Korea recorded record foreign net selling even as local institutions stepped in to buy, reflecting the international scope of the momentum unwind.
Goldman's trading desk has identified preliminary buy-the-dip signals, pointing to historical patterns where similar two-day drops of more than 10% were followed by recoveries. Since 2026, the high-beta momentum strategy has experienced multiple episodes of two-day losses exceeding 10%, with each followed by a rebound. But the bank cautioned that momentum factor positioning remains extremely crowded, and if deleveraging continues, the maximum drawdown could reach 50% — roughly double the current losses. The outcome hinges on the interplay between liquidity conditions and the pace of sentiment repair, the bank said.
Momentum Factor Still Up 27% Year-to-Date Despite Rout
Despite the sharp reversal, the momentum factor remains up about 27% year-to-date, leaving substantial unrealized gains vulnerable if the narrative around artificial intelligence shifts. Goldman specifically flagged concerns about Meta Platforms Inc.'s transition to cloud computing, which has raised questions about capital expenditure returns — a pattern the bank said mirrors previous episodes of AI-related anxiety. For now, Goldman's trading desk judges that the core AI narrative has not undergone a structural change sufficient to drive a deeper correction. The bank's assessment suggests that while the AI trade remains intact, any deterioration in the thesis could trigger a second wave of selling given the still-elevated positioning levels.
Deleveraging Risk Caps Tactical Rebound Potential
The tactical case for buying the dip rests on historical precedent, but Goldman's own data shows the risk is asymmetric. The bank estimates that if the deleveraging cycle accelerates, the potential 50% drawdown from peak would represent one of the most severe momentum factor corrections on record, with implications for systematic strategies and high-beta growth stocks more broadly. The momentum factor's year-to-date gain of 27% means that even after the 24% peak-to-trough decline, significant profit-taking pressure could emerge if the AI thesis faces a credible challenge. Goldman said the current selloff owes more to low liquidity and thin summer trading volumes than to a fundamental shift in trend, but cautioned that the early stage of position unwinding leaves the market exposed to further cascading liquidations.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.