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Factbox-Hedge funds turn nimble to deliver April gains, say sources

By Thomson Reuters May 6, 2026 | 5:08 AM

By Nell Mackenzie and Summer Zhen

LONDON, May 5 (Reuters) – Hedge funds pounced on the U.S./Iran ceasefire to post positive performances in April, with some reaping returns from bullish bets ​placed just before the April 8 ceasefire announcement, reports ‌from prime brokerages and industry analysts show.

Stock pickers returned more than 9% in April, their best monthly performance since Goldman Sachs started keeping track in 2016, said the prime brokerage in a note to clients on Saturday.

The S&P ‌500 ​index rallied over 10% in April, the ⁠European STOXX 600 index gained ⁠almost 5%, while the dollar fell almost 2% against a basket of currencies.

Hedge funds benefited from the broad stocks rally and from individual trades that didn’t depend on this, the Goldman ​Sachs note said.

Tech-focused stock pickers returned a record result, nearly 19% in April, it added.

Systematic hedge funds returned around 2.9% in ⁠April, making money from crowded trades ⁠and from going with the momentum of markets rather ​than betting against them, said the note.

By month-end, hedge funds mostly ​sold stocks but in order to make sure that their ‌overall portfolios were neither long nor short, said another note from Morgan Stanley.

A short bet wins when asset values decline.

Hedge funds able to act fast and change their bets were successful, a report ⁠from hedge fund data firm PivotalPath said.

This was true for multi-strategy hedge funds. Faster decision-making processes helped them to recover from difficult markets in ⁠March, as they ‌rebuilt wagers focusing on single stocks and relative ⁠value trades, its report added.

Big multi-strategy hedge funds ​such ‌as Schonfeld Strategic Advisors, Citadel and ExodusPoint finished ​the month ⁠positively. The funds declined to comment on the results.

For macroeconomic funds, April was a month of two halves, according to PivotalPath.

“Managers who faded the oil shock early and positioned for de-escalation were well rewarded,” it said.

(Reporting by Nell Mackenzie and Summer Zhen; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe ​and Alexandra Hudson)