I'm sure that a few funds will continue to exist and they'll post huge profits because they're run by people who know what they're doing.
Does anyone know what they're doing? Since this class of person has arrived in cryptoland I'm not sure I can remember a single one of them making a statement on this area that I found remotely insightful. It's the peeps who've been here forever who have a better idea of what's what.
I don't think arriving with conventional market experience is going to put you ahead as this ably proves.
You're only thinking about the late entrants. There have been hedge funds in this space since 2013, some of which are incredibly successful. Pantera Capital said a few months ago they were up 10,136.15% after fees and expenses since they launched. If you look back at what Morehead was saying back in 2013, the guy was a visionary. Altana has been around since 2014 and made 1500% returns last year. There are others as well.
To be fair, nobody knew how prolonged this bear market would be. Conventional wisdom said a multi-year bear was possible, but you'd be a fool to
assume it was going to happen. It's difficult to fully hedge a diversified portfolio against a prolonged bear market. In a global economic crash, every market contracts, meaning there is no safe haven. Cryptocurrency markets are the same, just on a smaller scale. People think "why don't they just short?" They can and do, but they can't just perpetually stay net short. They need to limit counterparty exposure and more importantly, they need to ensure proper liquidity to exit shorts...... not easy in super thin crypto markets, particularly altcoins.
Just like late bubble buyers, late entrant funds who were under-capitalized or didn't hedge properly are getting squeezed. I don't think that's characteristic of
all hedge fund activity in the space though.