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Kyle Su’s Kuark Capital launches $400 million Asia tech-focused hedge fund

By Thomson Reuters May 18, 2026 | 11:10 PM

By Summer Zhen

HONG KONG, May 19 (Reuters) – A Hong Kong-based fund manager is launching a new hedge fund to tap rising investor interest in Asian artificial intelligence stocks, with a focus on Taiwan and Japan, ​three sources familiar with the matter said.

Kuark Capital, led by Taiwanese ‌Kyle Su, has secured at least $400 million before launching the hedge fund, said one of the three sources, all of whom declined to be named as they were not authorised to speak to the media.

Su did not respond to requests for comment.

The hedge fund’s debut comes as ‌a sharp ​tech stock rally in Asia, from China to ⁠South Korea, has spurred investors ⁠to seek more exposure to AI firms in the region.

Investor interest has been fuelled by the region’s central role in the AI supply chain, from chip making to packaging and materials. Global asset allocators are also looking at ​undervalued opportunities to enhance their returns.

Asia equity long-short funds on average posted a 10% gain in the first four months of this year, outperforming other regions ⁠and outpacing a 5.2% average gain globally, according ⁠to Morgan Stanley prime brokerage data.

The concentration of semiconductor stocks ​in the Asia-focused long-short funds contributed to the performance, the data showed.

Kuark Capital plans ​to adopt a low-net-equity long-short strategy, meaning it will look for both ‌bullish and bearish stock ideas while keeping overall market exposure limited.

Market participants said low-net strategies have gained traction in recent years, as they require fund managers to protect downside risks amid increased volatility in global markets.

Su previously managed a roughly $1 billion ⁠equity portfolio at Kadensa Capital for about nine years, according to a Kuark investor presentation seen by Reuters.

Kadensa Capital is a Hong Kong-based hedge fund focused on Asian ⁠investments.

Kuark’s presentation said its ‌strong local networks in Taiwan and Japan, along with Su’s ⁠engineering background, give it an edge in uncovering investment ideas ​across ‌the region.

Kuark has hired Hiro Ikeda, a Japanese-Taiwanese veteran investor ​with experience ⁠at Optimas Capital, Fidelity and T. Rowe Price, as director of research. Ikeda also did not respond to requests for comment.

Ikeda managed a low-net mandate for Optimas Capital – which received an allocation from New York-based hedge fund Millennium Management last year – in Hong Kong for four years, according to Kuark’s presentation.

(Reporting by Summer Zhen; Editing by Sumeet ​Chatterjee and Thomas Derpinghaus)