The 3 big trends behind hedge funds 'historic' rebound from heavy Iran war losses
Hedge funds are staging a dramatic rebound after suffering hefty losses during March’s Middle East-fueled market mayhem, with equity-focused strategies landing their biggest monthly gain for investors in a quarter-century last month. Overall, the industry advanced about 3% on average in April, according to new data published by global industry tracker Hedge Fund Research. “We saw in April a historic performance recovery for hedge funds from a historic decline in the prior month of March,” said HFR president Kenneth Heinz. Among the industry’s big winners were equity hedge funds — a cornerstone strategy in which managers invest both long and short on listed companies. Short selling involves investors betting against a particular stock or security, with the aim of profiting from a decline in its value. Here, stockpickers notched a standout 5.43% monthly return in April, a sharp rebound from March’s 4.33% slide. This was also their strongest monthly showing since February 2000, which Heinz described as “an amazing performance.” BlackRock back hedge funds Hedge funds suffered steep losses in March, with their portfolio positions caught out by the Middle East conflict and resulting oil price spike. HFR’s all-strategy index lost almost 3% for the month, marking its biggest dip since June 2022. .SPX line 2026-03-01 Stocks have staged a rebound after losses in March. But in its latest performance update, Heinz pinpointed three key drivers underpinning hedge funds’ strong run in recent weeks: the market rally sparked by the Middle East ceasefire agreed April 8; a “powerful return” of the AI and technology trade; and growing expectations of a flurry of IPO activity in the coming months. More broadly, the all-strategy HFRX Global Hedge Fund Index — a tradeable benchmark which measures overall industry performance across all investment strategies and approaches — advanced 2.98% in April after suffering a 2.95% loss in March. Heinz said: “In February and March there was a lot of concern with regard to AI and the impacts it would have on business in terms of revenue erosion and business model erosion. That has not been the case, and sentiment has not been motivated by that, in the month of April.” BlackRock said in a note Monday that it continues to lean on hedge funds, as well as private market strategies, to capitalize on “idiosyncratic returns” as AI winners and losers emerge. Meanwhile, Heinz highlighted the “positive impact” resulting from the slide in oil prices and favorable developments surrounding the Middle East conflict as a major driver of performance in April and into early May. “The battlefield has shifted, at least for the moment with the ceasefire in place, away from missiles and bombs and more to economic warfare associated with the supply chain energy market energy disruptions,” he explained. SpaceX headlines IPO calendar Hedge funds and investors also anticipate a “very, very robust” IPO calendar this year, headlined by SpaceX and OpenAI, Heinz said. “These are very dramatic market developments expected to impact hedge fund performance in the middle part of the year,” he added. This is likely to boost certain event-driven strategies, which bet on stock mispricings and other valuation anomalies created by M & A, bankruptcies, takeovers and other corporate actions, including IPOs. The HFRX Event Driven Index gained 1.98% in April. Elsewhere, emerging market hedge fund strategies — which trade securities in developing and frontier economies — also fared well. The HFRX Emerging Markets index gained 7.33% in April, its strongest performance since April 2020, at the outset of the Covid-19 pandemic, Heinz noted.
