The Chicago-based firm, led by Chief Investment Officer Jay Feuerstein, engineered this growth by evolving its systematic framework to address unexpected dislocations in global fixed income and equity markets. While legacy models struggled with the decoupling of central bank policy and sovereign yields, the new Sigma sub-model provides a high-velocity, tactical layer. Unlike the firm’s defensive Vega model, which guards against systemic shocks, Sigma executes roughly 100 trades annually, focusing on localized liquidity voids and thematic volatility.
Feuerstein, a veteran of Drexel Burnham Lambert and Bear Stearns, built Gnomon Alpha on a non-curve-fitted, rules-based architecture. The firm’s strategy maintains a structural -0.62 correlation to down markets, providing a hedge that avoids the costs associated with traditional put options. By integrating the Sigma model’s agility with existing multi-model matrix trading, the firm has moved beyond static yield curve assumptions, prioritizing price velocity in commodities and foreign exchange to maintain institutional-grade resilience.

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