
Hedge Funds Cap Strong H1 as 80% of Managers Post June Gains
Four out of every five hedge funds finished June in positive territory, capping off a resilient first half of 2025, according to new Hedge Fund Research (HFR) data. Powered by renewed market clarity and legislative tailwinds, long/short equity, event driven, and discretionary macro strategies all booked solid gains, highlighting how diverse playbooks are navigating a volatile but opportunity-rich backdrop.
HFR’s industry-wide Fund Weighted Composite Index rose 2.36% in June — its biggest monthly gain of the year — pushing the benchmark up almost 4% year-to-date. After a sluggish first quarter, when the index slipped 0.42%, hedge funds bounced back strongly with consecutive gains in May and June, resulting in a robust 4.35% Q2 return.
Kenneth Heinz, HFR’s President, summed up the turnaround: “The robust Q2 performance occurred against a backdrop of dramatically shifting drivers that began clouded by policy uncertainty, geopolitical risk, trade/tariff volatility, all of which evolved into significant policy clarity over the quarter stemming from passage of legislation and improving economic outlook.”
Equity Hedge Funds Out Front
Equity-focused hedge funds led June’s rally, adding 3.40% for the month and taking their YTD gain to 6%+. Tech-heavy equity strategies outperformed dramatically, surging 7.1% in June alone to help erase Q1 losses and deliver a 5.64% YTD advance. Fundamental growth stock-pickers were up more than 8% so far in 2025, while value-oriented funds booked a healthy 7.1% YTD after a 3.1% lift last month.
Quant-driven directional equity, multi-strat, equity market neutral, and energy/basic materials-focused strategies have also notched 6%+ gains YTD. However, not every equity sub-sector shone: healthcare equity hedge funds remain underwater, down 5.89% YTD, despite posting a modest 2.5% bounce in June.
Event-Driven Strategies Rally on M&A and Special Situations
Event-driven managers, who profit from catalysts like M&A deals and corporate restructurings, gained 3.18% last month, lifting first-half returns to 5.23%. Event-driven multi-strategy funds delivered a standout 9.35% for H1, with a 4.56% June boost, while special situations and merger arbitrage managers are up 6.57% and 5.44% respectively for the year.
Macro Hedge Funds See Divergence
Macro managers showed notable dispersion across sub-strategies. Discretionary macro traders — who actively play shifting global economic and policy trends — recorded their sixth straight month of gains, adding 2.55% in June and closing H1 up 8.42%. By contrast, some systematic macro and trend-following funds struggled to capture the same moves consistently.
Outlook: What’s Next for the Back Half of 2025?
For hedge fund investors, the strong first half performance underscores the resilience of strategies that thrive on policy pivots and tactical dislocations. But industry pros are already flagging risks ahead. With Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” poised to shake up trade policy yet again and the White House heading for a potential confrontation with the Federal Reserve over rate cuts, renewed volatility could reshape trends.
If tariff uncertainty resurfaces and the Fed remains hawkish despite signs of softening in pockets of the economy, discretionary macro and multi-strategy funds may continue to outperform as they navigate policy crosswinds and relative value opportunities. Meanwhile, equity hedge funds will need to see sustained earnings momentum and a clear rate trajectory to build on H1’s gains.