Bill Gross, the bond market’s most renowned investor, quit Pacific Investment Management Co (PIMCO) for distant rival Janus Capital Group Inc on Friday, the day before he was expected to be fired from the huge investment firm he co-founded more than 40 years ago.
Gross, 70, had been clashing with the firm’s executive committee and had threatened to resign multiple times, a source familiar with the situation said.
The committee had planned to accept his latest resignation from the post of chief investment officer on Saturday.
The surprise development, which rattled the US bond market, came the day before PIMCO and its parent, German insurer Allianz SE, planned to dismiss Gross, the source said.
Gross will manage the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund beginning tomorrow, Janus said in a statement. The fund, started in May, has just US$13 million in assets.
Dan Ivascyn, one of PIMCO’s deputy chief investment officers, was named on late Friday as chief investment officer to replace Gross, who, according to Forbes, has a net wealth of US$2.3 billion.
“PIMCO and Bill Gross are synonymous,” said Todd Rosenbluth, director of mutual fund research at S&P Capital IQ. “It will be extremely hard to think of PIMCO and Bill Gross as separate, and it will take time for investors to realize that he no longer is going to play a role at one of the world’s largest fixed income managers.”
The departure is the latest twist in a tumultuous year for Gross, long dubbed “the bond king” for his prowess in fixed-income investing, and for the firm he helped build into a US$2 trillion powerhouse since co-founding it in 1971.
Earlier this year, his co-chief investment officer, Mohamed El-Erian, left PIMCO, causing a highly public falling out between the two long-time colleagues. El-Erian remains at Allianz.
Gross’ flagship PIMCO Total Return Fund, the world’s largest bond fund, with more than US$220 billion in assets, has suffered nearly US$70 billion of investor withdrawals over the past 16 months, while its performance has lagged its peers and the wider bond market.
His departure could lead investors to pull hundreds of billions of dollars in assets from PIMCO and invest it with Janus, a Morningstar analyst said.
PIMCO had prepared investors for the possibility of succession as recently as two weeks ago, said Karissa McDonough, a fixed income strategist at People’s United Wealth Management.
“They were trying to reassure us by driving home the point that they’re not so dependent on Bill Gross anymore,” McDonough said.
The departure also comes within days of news that the US Securities and Exchange Commission was investigating whether a popular PIMCO exchange-traded fund that Gross ran and that was launched to mimic the strategy of the much larger PIMCO Total Return Fund, had artificially inflated returns.
The probe is not related to Gross’ resignation, a spokeswoman for Allianz said.
Gross’ move was seen as a huge coup for Janus, which has less than US$180 billion in assets under management, less than the Total Return Fund and a fraction of PIMCO’s total assets.
Janus shares closed up 43 percent at US$15.89 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday, while shares of Allianz fell 8.5 percent in German trading.
“I look forward to returning my full focus to the fixed income markets and investing, giving up many of the complexities that go with managing a large, complicated organization,” Gross said in a statement.
Gross said he had chosen Janus because of his longstanding relationship with chief executive Richard Weil, who spent 15 years at PIMCO before taking his current job in 2010.
Gross will be based in a new Janus office to be set up in Newport Beach, California, where PIMCO is based.
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