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Millennium Aims for $10 Billion Capital Raise in 2026

Published Jun 30, 2026
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Summary:
  • Millennium Management plans to raise at least $10 billion from investors later in 2026.
  • The fund posted a 2.4% return in May 2026, bringing its year-to-date gain through May to 6.1%.
  • Co-CIO Paul Russo is set to retire at the end of 2026.

Multistrategy hedge funds are drawing big money from investors who want steady returns. Yet some of the largest firms have started giving profits back to clients just to keep their funds from getting too big.

A $10 Billion Bet

Millennium relies on many separate trading desks to generate consistent performance. That approach, known as a multistrategy hedge fund, has drawn investor demand. Instead of receiving all committed funds upfront, Millennium will have the ability to draw upon client pledges as needed, a method often used by private equity funds.

Changes in the Chief Investment Office

Millennium is also reshuffling its top team. The firm has already started to fill that gap.

Earlier in 2026, it hired Erdit Hoxha from Goldman Sachs Group to join the chief investment office.

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At the same time, Millennium has struck a deal with Bobby Jain. Jain used to be co‑chief investment officer at Millennium. He left to start his own firm, Jain Global. Under the new arrangement, Jain Global will manage money exclusively for Izzy Englander's firm.

A Growing Trend

Investors remain keen on multistrategy hedge funds, which continue to see strong demand. A spokesperson for Millennium said, "We have no comment."

Why Millennium Can Raise More Capital

Despite the industry trend of returning capital to investors to cap asset growth, Millennium's strong year-to-date performance and its flexible capital drawdown model give it confidence to seek additional funds. The firm's 6.1% return through May, combined with its deal to manage money for former co-CIO Bobby Jain's firm, positions it to continue attracting investor interest even as rivals like Citadel have limited inflows.

Strategic Context

Despite the industry trend of capping asset growth, Millennium's decision to raise additional capital underscores its confidence in deploying funds profitably. The upcoming retirement of co-CIO Paul Russo and the new arrangement with Bobby Jain's firm also signal a strategic transition aimed at maintaining Millennium's competitive edge in the multistrategy space.

Background: The Appeal of Multistrategy Funds

Multistrategy funds like Millennium, Citadel, and Point72 allocate capital to dozens of internal trading teams, each pursuing different strategies. However, as assets grow, finding enough profitable opportunities becomes challenging, leading some firms to return capital to investors. Millennium's decision to raise additional funds while others are capping growth indicates its belief that it can still generate attractive risk-adjusted returns.

The firm's ability to raise fresh capital, even as competitors restrict inflows, demonstrates confidence in its trading teams' capacity to deploy money profitably across a wide range of strategies.

Worth Noting

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