By
Bradley Saacks
New
Every time Bradley publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your inbox!
By clicking “Sign up”, you agree to receive emails from Business Insider. In addition, you accept Insider’s
Terms of Service and
Privacy Policy.
Follow Bradley Saacks
- Big-name hedge funds mostly had strong years, led by managers such as Michael Gelband's ExodusPoint and D.E. Shaw.
- It was a choppy year for funds, which battled markets strained by geopolitical stress from tariffs and international conflicts.
- Most funds still trailed the S&P 500's 16.4% return on the year, however.
Artificial intelligence spikes and sell-offs, market-rattling tariffs from the world's largest economy, mysterious quant losses — hedge funds battled a lot in 2025.
When the dust settled, the biggest names in the $5 trillion industry posted strong numbers last year.
Michael Gelband's ExodusPoint, which was the largest launch in industry history in 2018, had its best year on record, a person close to the New York-based manager told Business Insider. The firm was up 18% for the year after posting a 2.1% return in December.
Balyasny, Dmitry Balyasny's $31 billion manager, made 16.7% in 2025, a person familiar with the firm's returns said. D.E. Shaw's flagship multistrategy fund, Composite, was up 18.5%.
These funds, along with Ari Glass's Boothbay and AQR's $6.8 billion multistrategy Apex fund, bested the S&P 500's 16.4% gain on the year, and many managers put up returns in the mid-teens that only slightly trailed the index.
Some of the industry's biggest firms have lagged smaller peers throughout last year, as Business Insider reported. Izzy Englander's $83.5 billion Millennium, for example, was up 10.5% in 2025, following a 1.9% gain last month, according to a person close to the manager.
The managers in the table below declined to comment. Returns will be added as they are learned.

















