Citadel’s $16 Billion Gain In 2022 Makes Ken Griffin’s Firm The Top-Earning Hedge Fund Ever

Ken Griffin is the new hedge fund king, according to LCH Investments’ annual ranking of the world’s top 20 hedge fund managers, which estimates his Miami-based Citadel earned $16 billion in profits for investors last year and has posted $65.9 billion in net gains since inception in 1990.

Citadel surged past Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater to the top of the all-time list despite Bridgewater’s estimated $6.2 billion in net gains in 2022. Citadel’s flagship multi-strategy Wellington fund returned 38.1% last year, shining during a year when equity markets crashed, and LCH estimates the firm finished 2022 with $62.3 billion in assets under management after posting the largest single-year profit by any hedge fund on record.

“It even surpasses [John] Paulson’s 2007 gain, which has been described as ‘the greatest trade ever,’” says Rick Sopher, chairman of LCH Investments and CEO of Edmond de Rothschild Capital Holdings, in a press release. “Their progress up the rankings in the past few years has been remarkable.”

LCH Investments is the world’s oldest fund of hedge funds, returning 9.9% annually since its inception in 1969. Since many hedge funds that have standout returns enjoy their best years of performance with a smaller amount of assets before they use that track record to attract more capital, Sopher began to track which managers have generated the most raw cash for investors. George Soros’ fund was at the top of his initial list in 2010, and Dalio later took the top spot for seven years before Griffin supplanted him this year.

The stellar year for Citadel’s flagship fund followed a 26% return in 2021 and decades of strong performance–$1 million invested in Wellington at inception in 1990 would be worth $328 million today, compared with $23 million if it were invested in the S&P 500 Index. Citadel’s fixed income, tactical trading and equities funds all generated returns better than 21% as well in 2022. The firm returned $7 billion in profits to investors at the beginning of the year, the Wall Street Journal reported, with some expected to come out of all four funds. Citadel mints billions more every year from its market-making business, Citadel Securities, and Forbes estimates Griffin’s net worth has doubled in the last two years to $32 billion.

Citadel declined to comment on its investment strategy, but Griffin predicted to Forbes last year that high inflation would force central banks around the world to aggressively tighten interest rates and expressed concern about how sanctions against Russia would impact how the dollar is viewed around the world.

Macro hedge funds that trade based on international economic issues like these largely shined in 2022. The HFRI 500 Macro Index tracking such funds gained 14.2% last year, and multi-strategy funds at D.E. Shaw and Israel Englander’s Millennium Management returned 24.7% and 12.4%, respectively. LCH estimates D.E. Shaw generated $8.2 billion in gains for investors, while Millennium netted $8 billion.

Caxton Associates, a London-based macro hedge fund with $12.9 billion in assets according to the LCH report, was a newcomer to the list after generating an estimated $2.1 billion in profits last year and $19.8 billion since inception. Bruce Covner founded Caxton in 1983, and Andrew Law succeeded him as CEO in 2012.

Here is LCH’s full list of the top 20 hedge fund managers, ranked by net gains since inception.

Funds that are net long on equity holdings like Lone Pine and TCI dropped down the list, and Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global, which was on last year’s list with $25 billion in net gains since inception, dropped out. The Financial Times reported last May that Tiger Global had already lost $17 billion on the year, and its losses deepened slightly from there as it finished the year down 56%.

“Equity long/short managers, especially those who had been running net long and with a growth bias, generally performed poorly, with some performing even worse than market indices,” Sopher says.

Daniel Loeb’s Third Point also fell off the list after its main fund declined 21.8%, moving Louis Bacon’s Moore Capital, which is now closed to outside investors and has its historical gains frozen by LCH, back into the last slot.

The HFRI Equity Hedge Index tracking equity-focused funds sank 12.7% last year, and its fund-weighted composite index broadly tracking the hedge fund industry fell 3.4%. The LCH report cites data from research firm eVestment that hedge funds as a whole lost $208 billion last year and finished the year with $3.3 trillion in assets under management.

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/hanktucker/2023/01/22/citadels-16-billion-gain-in-2022-makes-ken-griffins-firm-the-top-earning-hedge-fund-ever/