China’s private funds see assets soar amid tech and AI investment boom China's onshore hedge and private funds have reached record asset levels, with over 123 funds each managing more than CNY 10 billion and a collective total exceeding CNY 2 trillion ($289 billion) as of early 2026. Quantitative strategies now dominate 54% of these large funds, driven by massive capital inflows into tech and AI sectors including semiconductor supply chains and large language model infrastructure. Meanwhile, private equity exit values surged to approximately $53 billion in 2025, more than tripling from $17 billion in 2023, signaling a recovery in deal activity despite ongoing regulatory risks. China’s private funds see assets soar amid tech and AI investment boom Onshore hedge funds hit record levels as quantitative and AI-focused strategies attract massive capital inflows. As of early 2026, more than 123 onshore hedge and private funds each manage over CNY 10 billion in assets. Collectively, that group controls more than CNY 2 trillion, roughly $289 billion, marking a new high-water mark for China’s alternative investment landscape. Quant funds and AI are doing the heavy lifting Quantitative funds now account for 54% of onshore hedge funds with AUM exceeding CNY 10 billion. Tech and AI sectors are attracting significant capital in China’s private markets, with managers racing to build positions in everything from semiconductor supply chains to large language model infrastructure. For context, Chinese securities-focused private funds hit a previous peak of approximately $1.63 trillion in AUM back in 2017. Private equity exits are finally happening Exit values in the region surged to approximately $53 billion in 2025. That’s more than triple the $17 billion recorded in 2023 and a meaningful step up from $46 billion in 2024. Still, overall deal activity in private equity remains cautious compared to historical peaks. What this means for investors The dominance of quantitative strategies within the largest funds is particularly worth watching. A market where more than half of the biggest players are running quant books means the competitive dynamics look very different from traditional long-only or discretionary investing. The roughly tripling of PE exit values from 2023 to 2025 is genuinely encouraging, but investors should calibrate their expectations carefully. Beijing has shown a willingness to intervene aggressively in its private markets when policy objectives demand it, as the tech crackdowns of recent years demonstrated. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .