- Banks now manage roughly $850 billion in quantitative investment strategy (QIS) programs globally — up from $362 billion five years ago — with leveraged exposure exceeding $1 trillion, enough to meaningfully move markets.
- JPMorgan’s QIS business manages over $100 billion in notional exposure and saw revenue grow 30% year-over-year in 2026, making it one of the bank’s fastest-growing units; Goldman Sachs Asset Management runs ~$175 billion in QIS funds.
- The surge in demand is driven by fear that traditional fundamental analysis can’t keep pace with AI-accelerated markets — institutions like the Murdock Trust and the American Red Cross have shifted significant capital to systematic strategies.
- QIS revenue is nearly risk-free for banks — preset trades, minimal capital requirements, no portfolio managers to pay bonuses — but overcrowding risks and aggressive hedge fund front-running of rebalancing flows are creating new market stability concerns.
What Happened?
JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, and other major banks are rapidly expanding their quantitative investment strategy businesses — selling systematic, rules-based trading programs to pension funds, endowments, family offices, and wealthy individuals who previously had little access to this type of strategy. Clients select from a menu of quant approaches and the bank executes the trades, often using derivative structures like total-return swaps. Revenue growth at JPMorgan’s QIS unit hit 30% in 2026, accelerating from 25% in recent years. Goldman manages about $175 billion in QIS funds. Strategies range from AI-driven earnings call analysis that rapidly adjusts portfolios to systematic hedging programs that buy market protection on a predetermined schedule — designed for investors who don’t want to scramble for protection when volatility spikes.
Why It Matters?
The QIS boom reflects a fundamental shift in how institutional investors think about markets. As passive indexing has concentrated capital in a handful of mega-cap tech stocks, and as AI is perceived to be accelerating market speed beyond what human analysts can match, systematic strategies are increasingly seen as the adaptive alternative. For the banks, the business model is nearly ideal: QIS revenue is reliable, largely risk-free, requires minimal capital, and scales without adding headcount — “Computers don’t get bonuses,” as Evercore analyst Glenn Schorr put it. The catch is that as the category swells past $1 trillion in leveraged exposure, overcrowding becomes a genuine risk. Strategies that generated alpha when few institutions ran them can become self-defeating when everyone piles in. Aggressive hedge funds are already front-running QIS rebalancing flows — a feedback loop that can amplify rather than dampen market volatility.
What’s Next?
The next test for QIS programs is whether they can demonstrate durable outperformance across a full market cycle — including the volatile, geopolitically driven markets of 2025-26. If systematic strategies continue attracting institutional flows at the current pace, they risk becoming a systemic factor in their own right. For banks, the incentive to keep growing the business is overwhelming. For clients — pension funds and endowments with long-term obligations — the harder question is whether they’re getting strategies sophisticated enough to justify the fees, complexity, and the new risks that come with being part of an increasingly crowded trade.
Source: The Wall Street Journal













