Today: 24 April 2026
Ricky Sandler’s Eminence Capital to Shut Down After 27 Years, Return Most Investor Cash by June
24 April 2026
2 mins read

Ricky Sandler’s Eminence Capital to Shut Down After 27 Years, Return Most Investor Cash by June

New York, April 24, 2026, 16:01 EDT

  • Eminence Capital, after 27 years in business, is shutting down and will return capital to its investors.
  • The firm halted redemptions—blocking investor withdrawals—as it moves to manage an orderly wind-down.
  • Stock-picking hedge funds are contending with volatile markets, pricier operations and more intense jockeying for investor dollars—the move comes against that backdrop.

Ricky Sandler is pulling the plug on Eminence Capital after 27 years, sending client money back and closing the book on a well-known New York long/short shop stung by lackluster returns and higher costs. The fund, a long/short equity player, picked shares to buy on the way up and shorted those it saw dropping.

The timing is notable: Eminence isn’t some small fund fading away. The firm’s website puts assets under management at about $5.9 billion, with 18 investment professionals based in New York. It runs three global equity strategies, all using the same research process.

In a letter reviewed by Bloomberg, Sandler pointed to volatile markets and evolving market structures as complicating factors for Eminence’s signature “bottom-up” investment strategy—one that leans heavily on individual company research over sweeping market bets. Sandler acknowledged the fund has “fallen short of our very high standard and your expectations.” Fortune

The firm stopped allowing redemptions as it works through an orderly wind-down. Cash payouts equal to at least 75% of every Eminence fund’s net asset value—assets less liabilities—should arrive by mid to late June, according to Sandler. That’s from Bloomberg via Fortune.

A spokesperson for Eminence wouldn’t comment, the report said. In his note, Sandler called the firm “a defining part of my life” and added that he was proud of what it built — business, culture, investor base. Fortune

According to Investing.com, which referenced Bloomberg News, Sandler highlighted rising expenses tied to retaining top talent and expanding critical infrastructure as key factors behind the decision to call it quits. Across the hedge fund industry, these costs have ballooned, with bigger players pouring money into trading desks, data capabilities, risk management tools, and operations.

Founded by Sandler in 1999, Eminence has stuck to fundamental long and short stock picking, zeroing in on global public equities. According to its website, Sandler holds both the chief executive and chief investment officer titles.

The shutdown lands as some hedge funds face turbulence. Just a day before, Man Group—the London-listed giant—reported assets under management holding steady at $228.7 billion, despite a client yanking $6.1 billion from one strategy in the first quarter. The market didn’t like it; shares slipped after that news.

Wider market swings have put investor caution front and center. BlackRock’s hedge fund unit recently urged clients to diversify strategies and keep an eye on overlapping exposures—crowded trades, they noted, tend to complicate exits. “As differentiation across markets increases, the opportunity set for hedge funds expands with it,” said Michael Pyle, deputy head of BlackRock’s Portfolio Management Group, in the team’s report. Reuters

Eminence hasn’t described the shift as a disorderly collapse. That’s not the risk for investors here. It’s more about what happens in the details: Will unwinding the rest of the portfolio go off without a hitch? Could the market turn on those positions before everything’s sold? And once cash comes back, where will clients redeploy it?

Still, it’s a clear line in the sand. Sandler’s firm—once founded on picking stocks one company at a time—shuts down just as markets speed up, expenses rise, and scale is more critical than it was back in 1999, when it first opened.

Stock Market Today

  • Boyd Gaming Corp. Shares Slip Below 200-Day Moving Average
    April 24, 2026, 4:20 PM EDT. On Monday, Boyd Gaming Corp. (BYD) shares dipped below their critical 200-day moving average level of $61.76, reaching as low as $61.60. This technical indicator, the 200-day moving average, tracks the average closing price over the past 200 trading days and is widely watched by traders to gauge market trends. BYD shares fell about 0.9% on the day, trading between a 52-week low of $40.44 and high of $71.00. Falling below this key average may raise caution among investors about potential near-term weakness in the stock's performance.

Latest article

Liberty Broadband stock jumps with Charter rally — what investors watch next week

Liberty Broadband Stock Plunges 26% as Charter Earnings Jolt Merger Bet

24 April 2026
New York, April 24, 2026, 4:03 PM EDT Liberty Broadband Corporation shares slid about 26% on Friday, pulled down by a sharp selloff in Charter Communications after the Spectrum owner reported deeper-than-expected internet customer losses. Liberty’s Class A shares traded at $41.65 and its Class C shares at $41.67 late in the session, while Charter was down about 26% at $179.04. The drop hit Liberty Broadband now because its value is tightly tied to Charter. Liberty is primarily an equity-method investment in Charter, and under their merger agreement each Liberty common share is to be exchanged for 0.236 of a
Ouster Stock Jumps as Atlanta Traffic Deal Puts BlueCity Near 2026 World Cup Sites

Ouster Stock Jumps as Atlanta Traffic Deal Puts BlueCity Near 2026 World Cup Sites

24 April 2026
Ouster Inc shares climbed 6.7% to $28.17 Friday after announcing its BlueCity lidar traffic system will be deployed at over 30 Atlanta intersections ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. The expansion, in partnership with Georgia DOT and Southern Lighting & Traffic Systems, builds on earlier installations near Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Ouster will report first-quarter results May 5.
Capital One $425M Settlement Approved: Who Gets Paid and When Payouts Could Start

Capital One $425M Settlement Approved: Who Gets Paid and When Payouts Could Start

24 April 2026
A federal judge in Alexandria approved Capital One’s $425 million class-action settlement over its 360 Savings accounts, ordering the bank to match the higher 360 Performance Savings interest rate for affected customers. Payments are set for July 21 unless appealed. The settlement covers account holders from September 2019 to June 2025. Individual payouts will reflect lost interest due to the rate gap.
Hims & Hers Stock Rallies After JPMorgan Bets On Its GLP-1 Pivot
Previous Story

Hims & Hers Stock Rallies After JPMorgan Bets On Its GLP-1 Pivot

Capital One $425M Settlement Approved: Who Gets Paid and When Payouts Could Start
Next Story

Capital One $425M Settlement Approved: Who Gets Paid and When Payouts Could Start

Go toTop