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Factbox-Hedge funds jump into volatile January to reap returns

By Thomson Reuters Feb 5, 2026 | 11:37 AM

By Nell Mackenzie

LONDON, Feb 4 (Reuters) – Hedge funds posted positive returns in January thanks to ripples of market volatility stemming from U.S. military action in Venezuela, ‍questions around the independence of the Federal Reserve and a cold snap that sent natural gas futures flying.

Performance globally rose by 2.2% in January, according to a JPMorgan client note dated Monday and seen by Reuters on Wednesday. That compares with ‌returns of 2.5% last year, when hedge ‌funds profited from crowded positions in U.S. equities and managed to avoid getting stung by a hefty selloff sparked by the rise of Chinese artificial intelligence model DeepSeek.

Stock pickers trading long ​and short positions in global equities posted a gain of 2.7%, while hedge funds trading many different strategies ‍under one roof returned between 1.6 ​and 3.2% and quantitative hedge funds were ​likely down around 1% in aggregate, the note said.

The U.S. ‍captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on January 3 after which the two countries reached a deal to export up to $2 billion worth of Venezuelan crude to the United States.

Investors have ramped up bets on higher long‑dated Treasury ‍yields and a steeper yield curve after incoming Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh was announced as U.S. President Donald Trump’s pick ‍to lead the ‍central bank.

And separately, natural gas futures soared ​140% between January 20 and 28 as ​extreme ⁠cold in the United States boosted heating ‌demand to near-record highs.

This gave hedge funds lots to trade. Some of the biggest multi-strategy funds like Balyasny, Citadel and Point72 returned between 1% and 3%. Citadel and Point72 declined to comment on the numbers.

(Reporting by Nell Mackenzie; Editing by Amanda ⁠Cooper, Aidan Lewis)