Medallion Fund: The Ultimate Counterexample? - Cornell Capital Group (2024)

MedallionFund.pdf(9207 downloads)

Abstract: The performance of Renaissance Technologies’ Medallion fund provides the ultimate counterexample to the hypothesis of market efficiency. Over the period from the start of trading in 1988 to 2018, $100 invested in Medallion would have grown to $398.7 million, representing a compound return of 63.3%. Returns of this magnitude over such an extended period far outstrip anything reported in the academic literature. Furthermore, during the entire 31-year period, Medallion never had a negative return despite the dot.com crash and the financial crisis. Despite this remarkable performance, the fund’s market beta and factor loadings were all negative, so that Medallion’s performance cannot be interpreted as a premium for risk bearing. To date, there is no adequate rational market explanation for this performance.

In his book, The Man Who Solved the Market, Zuckerman (2019) describes how James Simon built his firm, Renaissance Technologies, and its premier fund, Medallion. For investment scholars and practitioners, the most interesting part of the book is Appendix 1 where Zuckerman provides Medallion’s performance data. That data is reproduced as Table 1 here. To say that the performance is extraordinary is to understate by an order of magnitude.

In this short note, I work with the gross returns because they reflect the value added by investment management. The net returns, which are still extraordinary, are reduced by the fees that management can charge for its skill. Ironically, despite the industry leading fees charged by Medallion, Mr. Simons concluded that outside investors should not be allowed in the fund and accounts of the original outside investors were closed. Later Renaissance did start new funds in which outsiders could invest. More on that below.

Turning to time series of gross returns, the results are unprecedented. In forty plus years of reading hundreds of papers on investment anomalies, including some that benefited from data snooping and ex-post selection bias, I have never seen any performance approaching that reported by Medallion. Over the course of the 31 years from 1988 through 2018, the fund never had a negative return. During the dot.com crash and the financial crisis Medallion’s returns were 56.6% and 74.6%, respectively. Following the first two years of operation, the lowest annual return was 31.5%

The most dramatic way to appreciate Medallion’s extraordinary performance is to calculate the growth of wealth. As shown in Table 2, $100 invested in the CRSP value weighted market at the start of 1988 would have grown to $1,910 by the end 2018 (assuming all proceeds are reinvested). That reflects a respectable compound return of 9.98%,

Medallion Fund: The Ultimate Counterexample? - Cornell Capital Group (1)

particularly considering that both the dot.com crash and the financial crisis occurred during the sample period. In comparison, $100 invested in Medallion at the start of 1988 would have grown to $398,723,873. It takes a while for the to sink in. In 31 years, Medallion would have turned a $100 investment into a $400 million fortune. For a further comparison, I calculated “perfect foresight” returns using both monthly and annual data for the CRSP index. The perfect foresight returns are the returns that would be earned by investing in the market whenever the subsequent return exceeded that on Treasury bills and buying Treasury bills when it did not. Using annual perfect foresight returns, the ending POW for the market jumps to $7,539 illustrating the benefits of foresight. Using monthly returns, it grows to a remarkable $331,288. As large as this is, it still less than 10% of the ending wealth produced by the same $100 investment in Medallion.

Medallion Fund: The Ultimate Counterexample? - Cornell Capital Group (2)

In fairness, the Medallion estimate in Table 2 overstate growth that could be achieved in the aggregate because there were times when the fund was not accepting new investments so that employees could not reinvest and other times when employees chose to withdraw their winnings. Had that not been the case, the series of returns implies that the original seed money would have grown to many trillions of dollars. Long before that, the size of funds under management would have limited returns. Nonetheless, it is interesting to note that as the fund grew from $20 million to $10 billion, as shown in Table 1, the returns did not fall off. Apparently, the strategy was sufficiently robust that it could be scaled to $10 billion without affecting the returns.

As described by Zuckerman, Medallion’s strategy involved constantly opening and covering thousands of short-term positions, both long and short. According to Robert Mercer, one of Medallion’s key investment managers, Medallion was right on only about 50.75% of its trades. Nonetheless, he stated that taken over millions of trades that percentage allowed the firm to make billions. It is worth noting that engaging in millions of trades suggests that the transaction costs would be significant. The fact that the reported gross returns are after trading costs, makes Medallion’s performance even more extraordinary. It also implies that Renaissance was apparently particularly effective in minimizing such costs.

Returns of the level reported by Medallion could hardly be interpreted as risk premiums. In fact, it is difficult to speak of risk regarding Medallion because the fund never experienced a negative annual return. The fund did have a large standard deviation of returns, 31.7%, but that was around an arithmetic mean of 66.1%, implying a Sharpe ratio of exceeding 2.0. As to systematic risk, a regression of Medallion’s excess returns on the CRSP market index produces a beta of approximately -1.0 so that in addition to its extraordinary performance Medallion also offered a hedge against market risk. A three-factor regression adding the Fama and French (1996) variables SMB and HML reveals that loadings on both factors are also negative, though neither is statistically significant. Whatever the source of Medallion’s returns, it is not a reward for risk bearing.

Although Medallion is closed, Renaissance Technologies does have funds that are open to outside investors. The two primary ones are Renaissance Institutional Equities Fund and Renaissance Institutional Diversified Alpha. According to Zuckerman, however, neither follows the same strategy as Medallion. This is consistent with the fact that the returns on the funds have been relatively mundane and in no way comparable to Medallion. It suggests that there is a scale limit on whatever strategies have generated Medallion’s returns.

Unfortunately, this paper cannot offer a convincing explanation for Medallion’s performance. One possibility is that Medallion is simply a better market maker than any of its competitors and that over millions of trades that advantage translates into the observed returns. But the returns are so large, it stretches that explanation to the limit. Whatever the source of the performance, Medallion is a Michelson-Morley level challenge to the hypothesis of market efficiency. On that basis alone, it is worth further consideration.

References

Fama, Eugene and Kenneth R. French, 1996, Multifactor explanations of asset pricing anomalies, Journal of Finance, 51, 55-84.

Zuckerman, Gregory, 2019, The Who Solved the Market, Penguin Random House, New York, NY

#57 Reflections on Investing : Risk and Return Revisited

Structural Change and Valuation: Implications for Future Stock Returns

Investor Memo Q1 2024: The Market Throws Caution to the Wind

#56 Reflections on Investing : The Medallion Fund vs Market Efficiency

Medallion Fund: The Ultimate Counterexample? - Cornell Capital Group (2024)

FAQs

Has anyone replicated the Medallion Fund? ›

Impact and Influence. The fund's success has significantly influenced the hedge fund industry and inspired the creation of numerous other quant funds. However, few have managed to replicate its success.

What is the average return of the Medallion Fund? ›

What Were the Medallion Fund's Returns? Renaissance's main Medallion Fund made a whopping 62% every year (before fees) and 37% (after fees) from 1988 to 2021. To grasp how awesome that is, imagine putting $1 in the Medallion Fund back in 1988 – by 2021, it would have grown to almost $42,000 after fees.

Is the Medallion Fund real? ›

Medallion fund is one of the highest paying hedge fund of all-time. Offered by Renaissance Technologies, Medallion has been able to give 39 percent of annual returns after cutting of fee since its inception in 1988.

Why did the Medallion Fund close? ›

Why did Renaissance technologies close its Medallion fund to outside investors? They closed it to prevent leaking of information what they do and how they managed to beat the rest of the market basically by themselves, refuting the efficient market Hypothesis (EMH) in the process.

What stocks are in the Medallion Fund? ›

Medallion Fund has a very diverse portfolio with over 3,000 holdings. Only 10 holdings weigh over 1% of the entire portfolio, including Novo Nordisk, Apple, Palantir, and Vertex.

What is the best hedge fund to invest in? ›

Top Hedge Funds List
Fund Manager3-Year Performance MWTop 20 Conc.
Lodge Hill Capital Clinton Murray91.86% (24.26% Ann.)100.00%
Donald Smith Donald Smith90.02% (23.86% Ann.)67.38%
Silver Point Capital Edward Mule88.59% (23.55% Ann.)100.00%
Brave Warrior Advisors Glenn Greenberg77.99% (21.19% Ann.)99.92%
18 more rows

How does the Medallion Fund make so much money? ›

According to Robert Mercer, one of Medallion's key investment managers, Medallion was right on only about 50.75% of its trades. Nonetheless, he stated that taken over millions of trades that percentage allowed the firm to make billions.

Why is the Medallion Fund the greatest money making machine of all time? ›

The Medallion Fund is often hailed as the greatest moneymaking machine in history. Achieving an almost 40% net annual return (in later years after a 44% performance fee!) over 31 years (1987-2018) is nothing short of extraordinary.

What are the net returns of the Medallion Fund? ›

Renaissance's flagship Medallion Fund generated 62% annualized returns (before fees) and 37% annualized returns (net of fees) from 1988-2021.”

What is the best performing hedge fund of all time? ›

Renaissance Technologies' Medallion fund is the best performing hedge fund of all time.

Who runs the Medallion Fund? ›

Renaissance Technologies
FormerlyMonemetrics (1978–1982)
FoundersJames H. Simons Howard L. Morgan
HeadquartersEast Setauket, New York , U.S.
Key peoplePeter Fitzhugh Brown (CEO) Robert Mercer
ProductsMedallion Fund Institutional Equities Fund Institutional Diversified Alpha Institutional Diversified Global Equities
8 more rows

How profitable is the Medallion Fund? ›

The Best Performing Fund in Modern History
YearMedallion Fund Net ReturnS&P 500 Return
201536.01%-0.73%
201635.62%9.54%
201745.02%19.42%
201839.98%-6.24%
28 more rows
Jun 19, 2024

Can I invest in the Medallion Fund? ›

Can individual investors directly invest in the Medallion Fund? Individual investors cannot directly invest in the Medallion Fund, it's only open to current and former employees of Renaissance Technologies.

What strategy does the Medallion Fund use? ›

The Medallion Fund's strategy involves basing trades entirely on mathematical models, which has resulted in a consistent and strong performance record. The firm's founder, James Simons, gradually integrated mathematical models into trading, which transformed the firm's business approach.

What is the limit of Medallion Fund? ›

Simon capped the size of the Medallion Fund at US $10 billion, which meant that after a point, most returns were paid to investors every year. He did this because the statistical techniques that the Medallion Fund was using could only work to a certain scale.

Can hedge fund returns be replicated? ›

The factor replication method attempts to replicate the return stream of the hedge fund universe. The simplest way of doing this is by carrying out a linear regression, using one of the headline hedge fund indices and a number of factors.

Can you replicate an ETF? ›

Various methods have emerged to replicate the index. The classic method is physical replication. If the ETF directly holds the all securities of the index, this is known as full replication. However, full replication is not always possible.

What was the average holding period of the Medallion Fund? ›

Medallion's average holding time ranged from a day in a half to a week in a half and was profitable almost every day. Berlekamp pushed for shorter-term trades because the long-term trades were less successful. He hoped to recreate the fund in the image of a casino.

Can I buy into the Medallion Fund? ›

Can individual investors directly invest in the Medallion Fund? Individual investors cannot directly invest in the Medallion Fund, it's only open to current and former employees of Renaissance Technologies.

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