Hedge fund managers made a killing in 2019, only to get put through the wringer when the coronavirus hit.
Institutional Investor revealed its closely watched “rich list” of hedge fund titans this week based on 2019 returns. Topping the list were many of the usual suspects, including mathematician-turned-quant trader Jim Simons, who earned an estimated $1.8 billion as the Dow Jones industrial average soared 22 percent.
But that was before coronavirus turned the world — and the stock market — upside down. Now, industry insiders say, some hedgies are struggling to keep money from flowing out the door.
“At least half of these guys have had their faces ripped off by coronavirus,” said one macro trader, using the industry parlance for taking huge and sudden losses. “I can see six that won’t even be on this list. And I’m looking forward to six guys you’ve never heard take their place.”
Even Institutional Investor, whose Alpha magazine released the list weeks earlier than it usually does, noted that its 2019 “rich list” already feels outdated.
“Of course, given the current cataclysm in global markets,” they wrote, “much of this wealth will likely have been destroyed in the three months since 2019 ended.”
According to the list, the top 25 hedge fund titans made a collective $20.2 billion in 2019 — the most since 2013. The top eight made more than $1 billion apiece, compared to just three who met that bar in 2018.
And while Simons, head of super secretive hedge fund Renaissance Technologies, topped the list yet again, he had to share the No. 1 spot with a new face: London-based trader Chris Hohn.