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Gross's Janus Fund Capping Its Best Quarter Since He Took Charge
Gross's Janus Fund Capping Its Best Quarter Since He Took Charge
Thursday,31/03/2016|00:01GMTby
Bloomberg News
Bill Gross is wrapping up his best quarter since taking over the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund.The fund has...
Bill Gross is wrapping up his best quarter since taking over the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund.
The fund has returned almost 2 percent this year and ranks in the top 11 percent of his Morningstar Inc. peers. While three months is a brief record for mutual fund managers, Gross said his performance bodes well in the trading arena he dominated for decades at Pacific Investment Management Co., prior to his September 2014 ouster.
“I know if you can put together a succession of 16-month periods in the top 75 percent that over 5 to 10 years to 15 years, you’re going to be in the 99th percentile,” Gross, 71, said during an interview last month in his 14th-floor office in Newport Beach, California.
“If we can’t make money on pure bonds, let’s make money on these other things,” Gross said.
The fund has benefited from a recovery in hard-hit developing markets. Thirty-six percent of assets were in emerging markets as of Feb. 29, mostly Latin American debt, according to the Janus website. The top 10 positions included the sale of credit default swaps to protect against swings in Brazilian and Mexican debt.
Gross sold similar short-term swaps this quarter for oil investors worried about the price of crude falling below $25 a barrel, he said in an e-mail. Under his swaps-selling strategy, the protection only pays out if “a 3 or 4 standard-deviation event occurs -- sort of a gray swan,” he said, a distinction from the ultra-rare events known as black swans.
Swaps contributed to Gross’s biggest losses last year, when the German bund “went a little crazy” in April and the U.S. stock market plunged in August, events he compared to selling insurance before a 7.0 earthquake in San Francisco.
‘I’m Obsessed’
“Sometimes it didn’t work,” he said.
Gross, who co-founded Pimco in 1971, declined to discuss his former employer, which he alleges in a lawsuit pushed him out to avoid paying a $200 million bonus. The fund company calls the claim, which a judge allowed to proceed this month, baseless and says it expects to prevail.
Pimco’s headquarters can be seen outside the manager’s window, beyond the six computer screens on his desk. Its $5.1 billion Pimco Unconstrained Bond Fund was down 0.5 percent in 2016 through Wednesday.
“I’m obsessed with beating everybody,” Gross said in the interview. “I’ve got my list of 50 competitors and I’ll be damned if I don’t look at every one of them.”
Even as performance has improved, clients haven’t followed, leading to four straight months of net redemptions at the unconstrained fund through February. After climbing to a peak of $1.52 billion last April, the fund shrank to $1.26 billion at the end of February, with more than half of the assets coming from the billionaire’s personal fortune.
To contact the reporter on this story: John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christian Baumgaertel at cbaumgaertel@bloomberg.net, Josh Friedman, Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam
Bill Gross is wrapping up his best quarter since taking over the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund.
The fund has returned almost 2 percent this year and ranks in the top 11 percent of his Morningstar Inc. peers. While three months is a brief record for mutual fund managers, Gross said his performance bodes well in the trading arena he dominated for decades at Pacific Investment Management Co., prior to his September 2014 ouster.
“I know if you can put together a succession of 16-month periods in the top 75 percent that over 5 to 10 years to 15 years, you’re going to be in the 99th percentile,” Gross, 71, said during an interview last month in his 14th-floor office in Newport Beach, California.
“If we can’t make money on pure bonds, let’s make money on these other things,” Gross said.
The fund has benefited from a recovery in hard-hit developing markets. Thirty-six percent of assets were in emerging markets as of Feb. 29, mostly Latin American debt, according to the Janus website. The top 10 positions included the sale of credit default swaps to protect against swings in Brazilian and Mexican debt.
Gross sold similar short-term swaps this quarter for oil investors worried about the price of crude falling below $25 a barrel, he said in an e-mail. Under his swaps-selling strategy, the protection only pays out if “a 3 or 4 standard-deviation event occurs -- sort of a gray swan,” he said, a distinction from the ultra-rare events known as black swans.
Swaps contributed to Gross’s biggest losses last year, when the German bund “went a little crazy” in April and the U.S. stock market plunged in August, events he compared to selling insurance before a 7.0 earthquake in San Francisco.
‘I’m Obsessed’
“Sometimes it didn’t work,” he said.
Gross, who co-founded Pimco in 1971, declined to discuss his former employer, which he alleges in a lawsuit pushed him out to avoid paying a $200 million bonus. The fund company calls the claim, which a judge allowed to proceed this month, baseless and says it expects to prevail.
Pimco’s headquarters can be seen outside the manager’s window, beyond the six computer screens on his desk. Its $5.1 billion Pimco Unconstrained Bond Fund was down 0.5 percent in 2016 through Wednesday.
“I’m obsessed with beating everybody,” Gross said in the interview. “I’ve got my list of 50 competitors and I’ll be damned if I don’t look at every one of them.”
Even as performance has improved, clients haven’t followed, leading to four straight months of net redemptions at the unconstrained fund through February. After climbing to a peak of $1.52 billion last April, the fund shrank to $1.26 billion at the end of February, with more than half of the assets coming from the billionaire’s personal fortune.
To contact the reporter on this story: John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christian Baumgaertel at cbaumgaertel@bloomberg.net, Josh Friedman, Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam
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