WorldQuant's annual International Quant Championship (IQC) has attracted a record 80,000 university students this year, doubling its previous participation numbers. This surge is attributed to advancements in artificial intelligence, including language models and agentic frameworks, which have made it easier for students to develop quantitative trading models.
The competition, run by the $7 billion quant hedge fund WorldQuant, tasks participants with creating mathematical models to predict market movements. This year's winners included individuals from South Korea, India, Kenya, and Taiwan, with MinKyeom Kim of South Korea's Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology taking the top prize.
This increase in participation occurs as quant hedge funds are experiencing a resurgence, having added $44 billion in assets in the first half of 2025 due to strong performance and investor inflows seeking algorithmic returns. WorldQuant's founder, Igor Tulchinsky, highlighted the role of AI in reshaping the competition and also revealed the firm's long-term focus on developing autonomous AI-driven platforms, aiming to deploy one million such agents capable of independent investment decisions in the coming years.