*
Multi-strategy funds lower in March
*
Niche strategies outperformed
*
Deleveraging on tariff fears cost many
(Adds more funds, context and table from paragraph 1)
By Nell Mackenzie and Carolina Mandl
LONDON, April 2 (Reuters) - Turbulent March markets
stalled positive returns for some of the biggest global hedge
funds while systematic and some smaller, more nimble funds ended
the first quarter with positive returns, according to sources
familiar with the matter.
As investors adjusted to seismic shifts in German policies
and growing U.S. tariff uncertainty, German 10-year bonds
suffered their largest weekly selloff since 1990,
the euro recorded its largest monthly gain since 2022,
and the S&P 500 saw its biggest weekly fall in six months
.
Hedge funds cut their equity exposure in early March. The
biggest funds faced margin calls, requiring traders to stump up
more cash in risky markets, said a UBS note to clients dated
March 27.
Portfolio losses stemmed from stocks that were sensitive to
the overall rise and fall of markets, including the biggest U.S.
tech names, the note said.
"...multi-strat funds acted quickly to raise cash, mitigate
losses, and preserve profitable trades in other areas such as
swap spreads and macro exposures," added the note.
Among the biggest global multi-strategy funds, Citadel and
Millennium Management returned -0.8% and -2% for the quarter,
respectively, said sources. Balyasny Asset Management finished
the quarter up 2.5%, said a separate source.
These three funds' results were first published by Bloomberg
on April 1.
Hedge funds with a more systematic approach fared better,
especially those with funds that trade managed futures and niche
markets.
Billionaire investor Cliff Asness's AQR Capital Management
finished the first quarter with positive returns in several of
its funds, said a source familiar with the matter on Tuesday.
The $128 billion hedge fund returned a positive 3.4%
performance in March. Its multi-strategy fund, Apex Strategy,
finished with a 9% first-quarter return.
This strategy benefited from a balanced long and short
strategy. It also saw arbitrage gains, exploiting the difference
of one financial asset against another, said the source.
A long position expects an asset to rise, whereas a short
position makes money when it declines in value.
AQR's Managed Futures Full Strategy posted an 8.2% return
for the quarter. This fund was buoyed by stocks trades but also
benefited from successful fixed-income and commodities trades.
Hedge fund EDL Capital, which trades assets like currencies
and bonds based on global macroeconomic outlooks, has returned
22% so far in 2025, a source familiar with the situation said on
Wednesday.
The $1.5 billion fund, run by star trader Edouard de
Langlade, finished March up 14% after a February in which the
fund returned 5.9%, said the source.
Bridgewater Associates' flagship fund Pure Alpha 18%
volatility posted a 9.9% gain in the first quarter, Reuters
reported.
Hedge funds picking long and short stock positions posted a
negative 2.4% return in March, whereas systematic stock traders
gained over 4%, Goldman Sachs ( GS ) said in a note to clients
on Wednesday.
Fund March Q1 2025
AQR Apex Strategy 3.4% 9%
AQR Delphi Long-Short Equity Strategy 2.3% 9.7%
AQR Helix Strategy 4.4% 3%
AQR Managed Futures Full Strategy 2.5% 8.2%
EDL Capital 14% 22%
Citadel Wellington -0.5% -0.8%
Millennium Management -1.2% -2%
Balyasny -1.00% 2.5%
Bridgewater Pure Alpha 18% volatility 9.9%