Lead paragraph
Goelzer Investment Management's Form 13F, filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission on April 9, 2026, discloses a concentrated shift toward technology equities in the quarter ended March 31, 2026. The filing lists 19 long equity positions with an aggregate market value of $54.7 million as reported in the Investing.com summary of the filing and the 13F submission itself (SEC filing, Apr 9, 2026; Investing.com, Apr 9, 2026). Goelzer's top three reported positions — Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT), and Nvidia (NVDA) — together account for 26.3% of the reported long book, with Apple alone representing 11.2% of disclosed market value. Compared with the prior quarter, the manager increased semiconductor exposure meaningfully (up to 27% from roughly 15% one year earlier, per the filing's industry classifications), while trimming selected consumer discretionary and financial names. These changes offer a compact but insightful window into tactical convictions at a boutique manager during a period of market rotation toward AI-related hardware and software beneficiaries.
Context
Goelzer's April 9, 2026 13F must be read against a larger market backdrop in which equities sensitive to AI adoption and semiconductor capital expenditure have outperformed year-to-date. The filing reports positions as of March 31, 2026, a quarter that saw the Nasdaq 100 gain 9.8% while the S&P 500 rose 6.1% (Bloomberg market data, Q1 2026). Against that benchmark performance, Goelzer's disclosed overweight to technology (38% of disclosed equity value) is a directional bet that mirrors the sector's relative strength. The manager increased stakes in semiconductor and AI-enabling companies while reducing allocations to bank names that underperformed in Q1 on margin-compression narratives.
The 13F snapshot indicates a modest level of concentration: the top five holdings make up 41% of the portfolio by disclosed value, a level consistent with an active, high-conviction approach rather than a broadly diversified index-like posture. Small-to-mid-sized registered investment advisors (RIAs) and family offices typically report a similar pattern when they emphasize a thematic thesis — in this case, AI infrastructure and software platforms. For institutional investors, such concentration implies greater idiosyncratic risk (company-specific outcomes) even as it offers potential for outsized returns if the thematic winners continue to capture market share.
Regulatory and timing context is important: Form 13F rules require disclosure of long equity positions held at quarter-end. The filing therefore lags intraday portfolio moves and will not capture subsequent adjustments made in April and May. Users of 13F data should treat the document as a point-in-time transparency tool, not a real-time trade signal. The April 9 filing date and March 31 reporting period are therefore critical anchoring data points when assessing what the manager actually held versus what it may be trading as macro conditions evolve.
Data Deep Dive
The 13F shows 19 reported long positions totaling $54.7 million in market value. Specific data points from the filing and the Investing.com report include the filing date (Apr 9, 2026), the reporting period end (Mar 31, 2026), and the concentration metrics: top three positions representing 26.3% and top five positions representing 41% of the disclosed book. Apple is listed as the largest single holding at 11.2% of disclosed value, followed by Microsoft at 8.1% and Nvidia at 7.0% (SEC Form 13F, Apr 9, 2026; Investing.com, Apr 9, 2026).
Quarter-over-quarter changes are instructive: the filing indicates a 12% sequential increase in technology exposure measured as a share of disclosed holdings, while semiconductor-related exposure rose 80 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 27% of the portfolio — a 12 percentage point rise year-over-year from ~15% in Q1 2025. These moves are consistent with an allocation rotation into hardware and infrastructure providers that benefit from higher AI training and inference demand. By contrast, financials fell to 6% of the disclosed book versus 14% a year earlier, suggesting a tactical de-emphasis on bank and insurance stocks given margin and regulatory concerns.
The filing also shows three new positions initiated in the quarter and two positions completely exited. New entries were in mid-cap software and a data-center REIT, signaling a blend of growth and infrastructure exposure. Position sizes for new entries ranged from $0.8m to $2.4m, representing between 1.5% and 4.4% of disclosed portfolio value — strategic, rather than token, allocations. The exits, by contrast, were in legacy consumer discretionary names that underperformed peers and had been under review in prior quarters according to previous 13F disclosures.
Sector Implications
Goelzer's tilt toward technology, and specifically semiconductor and AI-related names, provides a microcosm of broader active-manager behavior in Q1 2026. Asset managers who increased exposure to AI hardware and software are benefiting from a sector rally that outpaced cyclicals. For semiconductor suppliers and fab-equipment makers, a reallocation of capital at the portfolio level can imply sustained demand visibility for capital equipment and lead times, with implications for capital expenditure cycles across the industry. Institutional investors tracking these signals should weigh whether the reallocation is thematic (long-horizon structural change) or tactical (near-term momentum chasing).
The reduction in financials and consumer discretionary exposure reveals risk management priorities: margin compression, slowing loan growth, and consumer balance-sheet concerns prompted Goelzer to reduce cyclicality. For portfolio construction, that implies a tilt from beta and yield-oriented exposures toward secular-growth equities. Compared with benchmark weights — where technology represents roughly 29% of the S&P 500 by market cap (S&P Dow Jones Indices, Q1 2026) — Goelzer's 38% allocation is meaningfully overweight, suggesting higher tracking error but also a clearer thematic conviction.
Peer comparison is informative: small and mid-size managers in our set increased tech exposure by an average of 7 percentage points QoQ in Q1 2026, according to Fazen Capital's aggregated 13F read of a 50-firm sample. Goelzer's 12% QoQ increase thus situates it above the peer mean, indicating a more aggressive tactical posture. That posture will likely produce relative volatility versus passive benchmarks in periods of tech underperformance.
Risk Assessment
Concentration and thematic exposure elevate idiosyncratic risk. With the top five holdings at 41% of disclosed value, negative news at a single large constituent could generate outsized portfolio-level drawdowns. Additionally, the manager's heavy exposure to semiconductors — a sector that is subject to cyclicality and inventory dynamics — heightens sensitivity to revisions in corporate capex guidance. If hardware demand cools or supply gluts emerge, semiconductors can retrace sharply, a risk that active managers like Goelzer must manage through position sizing and liquidity buffers.
Another risk is 13F visibility itself: the filing omits short positions, options, and non-U.S. equities below reporting thresholds, which can materially change net exposure. Investors using 13F data to infer strategy should therefore recognize blind spots. Market liquidity for some mid-cap picks may be limited; several of Goelzer's mid-cap software positions represent less than 0.5% daily average volume, which could complicate large-scale asset-manager replication.
Finally, macro risks — interest-rate volatility, trade tensions affecting semiconductor supply chains, and potential regulatory actions on AI — remain unpriced by a single quarter's 13F. These macro vectors could alter the investment thesis that underpinned the reported shifts, turning a thematic overweight into a source of headwind if conditions reverse.
Outlook
The disclosures suggest Goelzer will remain a pro-technology, high-conviction allocator while maintaining select exposure to infrastructure plays like data-center REITs. If AI adoption continues and capex remains elevated, the manager's positioning could outperform passive benchmarks; conversely, cyclical weakness in hardware demand could create performance drag. The near-term catalyst set includes Q2 corporate earnings (beginning July 2026), semiconductor inventory updates in supplier reports (June–July), and any fresh guidance on AI-related procurement from hyperscalers.
For institutional allocators, Goelzer's 13F represents actionable intelligence on small-manager tactical shifts. Those seeking exposure to the same thematic risk can either follow larger-cap funds that have already pivoted or consider direct allocation to the specific constituents named in the filing — while acknowledging the liquidity and concentration differences. For research teams, the filing supplies a testable signal: did above-benchmark performance by tech-oriented managers in Q1 persist through Q2 and the first half of 2026? That question is measurable via performance attribution against sector benchmarks.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Goelzer's move is emblematic of a broader reallocation toward AI infrastructure that is rational from a secular-demand standpoint but hazardous from a timing perspective. Our contrarian view is that while exposure to AI hardware is justified, the marginal returns to allocating incremental active dollars into crowded large-cap names (e.g., AAPL, MSFT, NVDA) are diminishing because those securities already embed significant forward expectations. Smaller, less obvious suppliers in the semiconductor supply chain and select data-center operators may offer asymmetrical payoffs with lower headline multiples. Fazen Capital therefore emphasizes portfolio-level balance: pairing conviction tech bets with defensive allocations to high-quality, cash-generative industrials or select fixed-income ladders to manage drawdown risk.
For investors interpreting 13F filings, a final contrarian note: the most profitable insight often comes from identifying what managers are exiting rather than what they are buying. Goelzer's exits in legacy consumer names should prompt due diligence on secular demand and margin sustainability for those sectors before assuming mean reversion.
Bottom Line
Goelzer's Apr 9, 2026 13F reveals a clear tactical tilt into technology and semiconductors, with 19 reported positions totaling $54.7m and the top three holdings comprising 26.3% of the book; this increases idiosyncratic risk even as it aligns with AI-driven sector momentum. Institutional investors should treat the filing as a point-in-time signal — useful for thematic scanning but incomplete for replication without further due diligence.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
