(HedgeCo.Net) After years of net closures and headlines about outflows, hedge funds are finally back in growth mode. New research shows that in the first half of 2025, 262 new hedge funds launched while only 138 liquidated – a net gain of 124 vehicles, marking the strongest first-half launch momentum in three years and the lowest liquidation rate in two decades. Confluence Group
The turnaround reflects a mix of performance stabilization, renewed allocator appetite for diversification, and evolving strategies that lean into private credit, quant, and AI. Multi-strategy platforms continue to attract the biggest tickets, but there’s also fresh interest in focused sector funds and niche macro managers.
At the same time, activist hedge funds are regaining prominence. Recent months have seen a wave of campaigns aimed at unlocking value through mergers and strategic reviews. A small South-Florida-based hedge fund played a key role in pushing for the $10.9 billion sale of Comerica to Fifth Third Bancorp, a deal that has Wall Street expecting more bank M&A pressure. Reuters+1
In consumer staples, Elliott Management has disclosed a $4 billion stake in PepsiCo, setting the stage for one of its largest activist engagements. The fund is reportedly pushing for operational changes and capital-allocation shifts to close what it sees as a valuation gap versus peers. Hedgeweek Other activists are circling underperforming industrial and tech names, encouraged by boards that are more open to deals and by a more constructive credit environment. Bloomberg+1
For hedge fund allocators, today’s landscape is more nuanced than the simple “hedge funds are dead” narrative of a few years ago. On one side are large, multi-manager platforms that resemble diversified financial conglomerates; on the other are high-conviction specialists and activist shops willing to run concentrated books and engage directly with boards.
The resurgence in launches raises questions about capacity and competition. Will new managers be able to secure stable seed capital and differentiate themselves in an already crowded field? Will activists deliver the kinds of outsized returns that justified their fees in past cycles, especially as regulators scrutinize leverage, derivatives use, and proxy fights more closely?
What’s clear is that the hedge fund industry is not quietly fading away. It’s adapting – embracing AI, expanding into private markets, and rediscovering the activist playbook. For investors sifting through today’s crop of new funds, the challenge is separating durable business models from opportunistic launches chasing short-term trends.