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Citadel’s various hedge funds rise in February, beating the S&P 500 in a choppy month

The firm's flagship multistrategy Wellington fund rose 1.9% in February, bringing its year-to-date gain to 2.9%.

BusinessBy Robert KingsleyMarch 2, 20262 min read

Last updated: March 29, 2026, 9:06 AM

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Citadel’s various hedge funds rise in February, beating the S&P 500 in a choppy month

Ken Griffin, CEO of Citadel LLC speaks on Squawk on the Street at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 21, 2026.

Billionaire investor Ken Griffin's various hedge funds at Citadel generated positive returns in February, navigating a volatile month for markets as macro uncertainty and disruption from artificial intelligence whipsawed asset prices.

The firm's flagship multistrategy Wellington fund rose 1.9% in February, bringing its year-to-date gain to 2.9%, according to a person familiar with the matter who asked not to be named because the information is private.

Performance was broad-based across the fund, with all five of Citadel's core strategies — commodities, equities, fixed income, credit and quantitative — finishing the month in positive territory, the person said

The tactical trading fund advanced 1.5% in February, lifting its year-to-date return to 3.5%, the person said. The equities fund gained 1.0% for the month and is now up 2.2% in 2026. Meanwhile, the global fixed-income fund climbed 1.6% in February, bringing its year-to-date increase to 2.9%, according to the person.

The S&P 500 fell 0.9% in February amid fresh selling pressure in AI-linked and software shares. Fears that automation could erode established business models and trigger mounting layoffs have dampened investor sentiment, raising concerns about potential spillover effects on the broader economy. The market fell under massive pressure again after the U.S. and Israel's attack on Iran caused oil prices to surge.

The firm declined to comment. Citadel oversaw $66 billion in assets under management as of Feb. 1.

RK
Robert Kingsley

Business Editor

Robert Kingsley reports on markets, corporate news, and economic trends for the Journal American. With an MBA from Wharton and 15 years covering Wall Street, he brings deep expertise in financial markets and corporate strategy. His reporting on mergers and market movements is followed by investors nationwide.

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