Ken Griffins Citadel churned out a record $16 billion in profit for clients last year, outperforming the rest of the industry and one of historys most successful financial plays.

The top 20 hedge fund firms collectively generated $22.4 billion in profit after fees, according to estimates by LCH Investments, a fund of hedge funds. Citadels gain was the largest annual return for a hedge fund manager, surpassing the $15 billion that John Paulson generated in 2007 on his bet against subprime mortgages. This was described as the greatest trade ever in a subsequent book of the same name by Gregory Zuckerman.

But its a different story outside the industry giants, with hedge funds overall losing $208 billion last year as many managers found themselves on the wrong side of global market turmoil. LCH estimated a return of 3.4% at the top 20 managers while the rest of funds it studied suffered losses of 8.2%.

The largest gains were once again made by the large multistrategy hedge funds like Citadel, DE Shaw and Millennium, LCH Chairman Rick Sopher said in a statement. The strong gains they have generated in recent years reflect their increasing dominance in strategies which do not depend on rising asset prices, and their substantial size.

LCHs annual ranking is just one way to look at the performance of hedge funds, where managers are typically measured by their overall gains since inception. The ranking, which was first published in 2010, may exclude newer or smaller hedge funds that outperformed on a percentage basis. 

The findings also reflect the growing clout of multistrategy hedge fund firms, which are on the cusp of taking over equity-focused funds to become the dominant strategy in the industry. Their growing assets and higher fees are helping them win an expensive battle to hire and retain top traders.

LCH estimated that the industry has produced gains in excess of $1.4 trillion for clients since inception. The top 20 managers, which oversaw almost 19% of the industry assets, produced $692 billion of that profit, or 49% of the total. 

FirmAssetsNet Gains Since Launch2022 ReturnLaunch Year
Citadel$62.3B$65.9B$16B1990
Bridgewater80.658.46.21975
DE Shaw43.251.98.21988
Millennium6050.481989
Soros Fund Management*n/a43.9n/a1973
Elliott5542.12.81977
Viking25.135-31999
Baupost2533.2-1.51983
Farallon3933.10.51987
Appaloosa1432.31.61993
Lone Pine15.431.3-10.91996
SAC/Point 722830.12.41992
Och Ziff/Sculptor3229.9-1.81994
TCI3528.4-8.12004
Brevan Howard2928.15.12003
Egerton15.621.6-4.11995
Caxton12.919.82.11983
Davidson Kempner36.219.2-0.41983
King Street13.718.7-0.71995
Moore*n/a18.6n/a1990
Total622691.622.6 

Source: LCH Investments 

Gains are in billions of dollars. *denotes gains frozen when all outside capital returned

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