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Hedge funds rode buoyant stock market to deliver double-digit gains in 2025, Goldman Sachs says

By Thomson Reuters Jan 7, 2026 | 9:59 AM

By Anirban Sen

NEW YORK, Jan 7 (Reuters) – Hedge funds notched robust gains in 2025, as broader stock indexes ended the year near record highs and markets braved volatility triggered by uncertainty around U.S. trade policy, according to a Goldman Sachs ‍report.

Stock-picking funds posted returns of 16.24%, according to the Goldman Sachs prime brokerage note that was sent to clients this week, roughly in line with the benchmark S&P 500 index, which finished the year up about 16.4%.

For the month of December, returns for global long and short funds rose 1.28%, as positions in specific assets, crowded bets in stocks, and concentrated short positions drove gains for ‌the funds.

Reuters reported earlier in January that large multi-manager funds, including D.E. ‌Shaw, Balyasny Asset Management, Bridgewater Associates and Point72 Asset Management, generated mostly double-digit gains last year, boosted by an AI-powered stock market rally.

Funds have also benefited from U.S. President Donald Trump’s trade wars that triggered volatility in bond and currency markets. Large macro long and short funds typically ​invest in stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities.

Technology, media, and telecom-focused funds posted gains of 13.5% for the year, while healthcare long and short funds jumped 27.2% during the same period ‍despite a 2.4% decline in December. On a net ​basis, the software and tech hardware sectors witnessed a sell-off in ​December, while stock pickers built up positions in the information technology services sector.

Gross leverage levels for ‍Goldman’s overall prime book jumped 7.7 points to 292.8% in December, or nearly three times the book value, the bank said in the report. That data means that for every $100 of capital from investors, hedge funds on average had roughly $300 in long and short positions.

For global long and short funds, gross leverage levels were at an all-time high at 213.2%, ‍the Goldman data showed. Reuters reported in December that hedge funds are using near-record levels of leverage to trade equities and betting on debt-backed strategies in efforts to juice returns, making the ‍most of markets that have ‍been buoyed by a boom in artificial intelligence.

In December, hedge funds ​unwound positions in North American assets at the quickest pace in ​four months, ⁠as a higher number of closed short positions outweighed long ‌bets. Funds sold off similar positions in other regions, including Europe and Asia.

U.S.-focused multi-managers delivered positive returns for a ninth consecutive month, while European and Asian long and short funds both climbed 1.8% in December.

Systematic stock traders and quant funds on average reported gains of 2.4% in December, bringing their overall gains to 19.11% for the year, the Goldman data showed.

(Reporting by Anirban Sen in New York; ⁠Editing by Kirsten Donovan)