What Hedge Funds Actually Do
Hedge funds are pooled investment vehicles that use a wide range of strategies to generate returns for institutional and high-net-worth investors — with the goal of generating "alpha," meaning returns above a market benchmark. Unlike mutual funds, hedge funds can take both long and short positions, use leverage, trade derivatives, and invest across asset classes with few regulatory restrictions.
The term "hedge fund" encompasses dramatically different investment approaches. A long/short equity fund buys stocks it thinks will rise and shorts stocks it thinks will fall. A global macro fund takes positions across currencies, commodities, and sovereign debt based on macroeconomic views. A quantitative fund uses algorithms and statistical models to find and exploit market inefficiencies. An event-driven fund trades around mergers, bankruptcies, and other corporate events. The common thread is sophisticated strategy, limited investor base, and performance-based fees.
Hedge funds typically charge "2 and 20" — a 2% annual management fee on assets under management plus 20% of profits above a hurdle rate. A fund managing $5 billion earns $100 million in management fees annually before any performance fees. On a good year generating 20% returns, the performance fee on $1 billion in gains is $200 million — shared among a small team. This fee structure is why top portfolio managers generate extraordinary personal wealth, and why the industry attracts the most ambitious finance professionals.
How to Get In — The Real Paths
Long/short equity and event-driven funds hire primarily from IB analysts (bulge bracket) and sometimes from PE. The analytical skills, financial modeling, and company analysis built in IB/PE transfer directly. Top funds (Tiger Global, Coatue, D1) recruit from the best banks. Direct IB to HF is increasingly possible at the analyst level; IB → 2 years PE → HF is also a well-worn path.
Quantitative hedge funds (Renaissance Technologies, Two Sigma, DE Shaw, Citadel) hire PhD-level mathematicians, physicists, statisticians, and computer scientists — not IB analysts. The skills required are programming (Python, C++), statistics, and machine learning. These firms pay extraordinarily well and recruit from elite PhD programs and quant research roles at banks.
What Hedge Fund Analysts Do Day to Day
Fundamental analysts research potential investments — reading financial statements, building valuation models, meeting with company management, attending industry conferences, and generating investment theses that are presented to the portfolio manager. If the PM approves the idea, the position is put on. The analyst then monitors the position and updates the thesis as new information develops.
Quant analysts build and test statistical models, backtest trading strategies against historical data, and work to improve signal quality and execution. The work is primarily coding and data analysis rather than traditional financial modeling. The difference in day-to-day work between a fundamental and a quant HF is significant — they require almost entirely different skill sets.
Traditional asset managers (Vanguard, Fidelity, BlackRock) aim to track or modestly outperform benchmarks with diversified portfolios. Hedge funds aim for absolute returns — making money in any market environment using any available strategy. This higher ambition comes with higher stakes: hedge fund analysts whose ideas consistently lose money find their careers cut short. The performance-driven culture is intense in a way that most other finance careers are not.
What You Can Earn
Junior analyst (top-tier fund): $150,000–$300,000 all-in
Senior analyst: $300,000–$1,000,000
Portfolio manager (sector PM at large fund): $1,000,000–$5,000,000+
Founder / senior PM with own P&L: $10,000,000–$100,000,000+ (exceptional years)
Compensation is extremely variable because it's tied to fund performance. A great year at a top fund means exceptional bonuses. A bad year can mean no bonus at all, or layoffs. The upside is real — the downside is also real. HF careers are high-variance in both income and employment stability compared to banking or PE.