Jane Street has surged ahead of Wall Street rivals, posting nearly $40 billion in trading revenue and setting a new benchmark for high-speed trading firms. The firm’s performance outpaced competitors and even rivaled the largest U.S. banks, reflecting how volatile markets continue to reward firms built for speed and scale.
The New York-based trading powerhouse generated $39.6 billion in net trading revenue last year, according to documents reviewed by Reuters and sources familiar with the figures. That result places it firmly above competitors like Citadel Securities and Hudson River Trading, both of which reported just over $12 billion in trading revenue for the same period.
The gap is striking. While rivals posted solid growth, Citadel Securities rose about 25% year-over-year, Jane Street nearly tripled their output. Its scale now rivals major banks, including JPMorgan Chase, which reported $35.8 billion in trading revenue.
At its core, Jane Street operates as a global market maker. The firm buys and sells financial assets, ranging from ETFs and equities to bonds, commodities, and currencies across exchanges worldwide. Its role is simple in theory: provide liquidity so markets function smoothly. In practice, it relies on complex algorithms and rapid execution to profit from price differences.
Market turbulence played a major role in last year’s results. As investors reacted to economic uncertainty and shifting interest rates, trading volumes surged. Firms capable of handling rapid swings benefited the most.
Jane Street also gained from investments beyond traditional trading. The firm holds stakes in several high-value private companies, including the artificial intelligence startup Anthropic. Rising valuations in the tech sector added to its overall profitability.
Unlike many competitors, Jane Street does not rely on outside investors. That independence gives it more flexibility. The firm can take larger positions and hold them longer, even during periods of uncertainty, increasing potential returns when markets stabilize.
Its structure includes a unit that operates similarly to a hedge fund, holding positions over weeks or months rather than seconds. This hybrid approach combining high-frequency trading with longer-term strategies has helped diversify revenue streams.
Across Wall Street, trading desks are seeing renewed strength. Banks such as Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, and Citigroup have all reported increased trading revenue in recent quarters. Still, Jane Street’s latest figures set it apart.
The numbers suggest a clear shift. In a market shaped by speed, data, and volatility, specialized trading firms are not just competing with banks—they are surpassing them.
Read More: Google to Invest $40B in Anthropic as AI Race Intensifies
