13 Stocks that Best Performing Hedge Funds are Piling Into

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In this article we discuss the 13 stocks that best performing hedge funds are piling into. If you want to skip our detailed analysis of these stocks, go directly to the 5 Stocks that Best Performing Hedge Funds are Piling Into.

Hedge funds have been one of the most successful earning vehicles in the finance world over the past few decades, averaging record returns for investors that are not easy to match. Evidence of this stellar performance is indicative in the whopping $63.5 billion that the twenty best performing hedge funds made for their clients in 2020, a volatile year for the stock market that saw massive sell-offs and record tech-driven growth rallies.

According to data released by London-based LCH Investments, more than half of the $127 billion that hedge funds made last year was earned by the most successful managers that included Chase Coleman from Tiger Global Management LLC, Israel Englander from Millennium Management, Stephen Mandel from Lone Pine Capital, Andreas Halvorsen from Viking Global, and Ken Griffin from Citadel Investment Group. Bridgewater Associates, led by Ray Dalio, was the top performer of the year, earning more than $46 billion in 2020.

Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett

These funds focused on energy, basic materials, and technology growth stocks to drive their earnings, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research. There are many lessons that retail investors, who are increasingly shaping the market dynamics this year, can learn from the performance of hedge funds. By replicating the top holdings from the best performing funds, there is a good chance of making a great deal of money in a short space of time. After all, hedge funds set a 10-year earnings record in the pandemic-ravaged 2020.

According to research done by Insider Monkey, the stocks that the top 100 hedge funds are piling into this year include Sea Limited (NYSE: SE), the Singapore-based holding company that owns ecommerce platform Shopee, General Motors Company (NYSE: GM), the Michigan-based carmaker, and Twitter, Inc. (NYSE: TWTR), the California-based social networking platform. Sea Limited (NYSE: SE), General Motors Company (NYSE: GM), and Twitter, Inc. (NYSE: TWTR) are all backed by more than 10 of the 20 best performing hedge funds.

The hedge fund replication strategy is effective because hedge funds usually offer their services to very rich individuals, pension plans, insurance companies, universities, and other institutional clients. They also charge abnormally high fees, sometimes 2% of assets under management and 20% of gains, that the average investor cannot afford to pay. This disconnect between the hedge funds and the wider industry has stoked market volatility in recent weeks, with social media acting as a catalyst for change in this regard.