Quant funds suffer their worst trading rout of the year as momentum bets unwind
Systematic long-short equity managers posted their steepest losses since October 2025, with Renaissance down roughly 4% in the first two weeks of January.
Quant hedge funds are having a rough start to 2026. The first two weeks of January produced the worst 10-day stretch for systematic long-short equity managers since October 2025, driven not by a broader market meltdown but by crowded trades blowing up: their own crowded trades blowing up in their faces.
UBS estimated that US-focused quant funds dropped approximately 2.8% in the first two weeks of January 2026. Goldman Sachs prime brokerage data put the average loss for systematic managers at around 1% over the worst 10-day window, but individual firm numbers tell a sharper story.
## Who got hit, and how hard
Renaissance Technologies reported a loss of approximately 4% in the early days of January. Schonfeld’s quant strategies fell roughly 3.9%. Cubist was down around 2%. Qube, Man Group’s AHL division, Two Sigma, and Engineers Gate all felt the same headwinds.
The culprit was not a market-wide crash. The S&P 500 remained relatively buoyant during this period. What actually drove the losses was a combination of crowded positioning and a short squeeze in lower-quality stocks. Lower-quality, highly shorted equities surged, forcing funds that were short those positions to cover. That covering pressure drove prices even higher, which forced more covering.
## Context: 2025 was already a bruising year for systematic strategies
Quant funds spent much of 2025 underperforming, with a slow bleed of approximately 4.2% from June through July last year. October 2025 then delivered a sharper shock, particularly for Renaissance’s publicly available funds. When early January 2026 produced the worst 10-day performance since that October episode, it landed with added weight.
## What this means for investors watching systematic strategies
The core tension is that quant funds are most useful to institutional portfolios when they are uncorrelated to traditional equity beta. When quant funds lose money in a period when the S&P 500 is stable or rising, that uncorrelation argument gets harder to sustain. Crowded factor exposure is effectively a hidden beta: it looks like alpha until a lot of funds hit the exit simultaneously, at which point it behaves like a leveraged momentum trade that went wrong.