Subscribe

Bill Gross says 35-year bull market in stocks and bonds coming to an end

Janus money manager says attempt by global central banks to cure a debt crisis with more debt doesn't have much further to run.

Bill Gross said the bull market “supercycle” for stocks and bonds is approaching its end, as the unconventional monetary policies that have kept it alive since the financial crisis are running out.
The attempt by global central banks to cure a debt crisis with more debt doesn’t have much further to run, which will end a rally that’s lasted three and a half decades, the 71-year-old manager wrote in an investment outlook for Janus Capital Group Inc. Investors should stop focusing on price appreciation and instead look to “mildly levered income,” such as his recommendation to short German government debt, he said.
RUNNING OUT OF OXYGEN
“Credit-based oxygen is running out,” Mr. Gross wrote in the outlook, titled “A Sense of an Ending,” in which he compared the final stages of the market cycle with his own mortality. “I merely have a sense of an ending, a secular bull market ending with a whimper, not a bang.”
Mr. Gross, the manager of the $1.5 billion Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, acknowledged that his calls for the end of the bond rally in both February and April of 2013 were too early. This time around, he noted that he’s in prominent company, as investors including Stanley Druckenmiller, George Soros, Ray Dalio and Jeremy Grantham have cautioned that financial markets may be overpriced or bubbly, potentially setting the stage for lower returns.
Mr. Gross, who referenced Julian Barnes’ novel “The Sense of an Ending” in his outlook, said he continues to see a subdued interest rate environment for a prolonged span. He advised investors last month to leverage returns in an environment of persistently low interest rates and inflated asset prices.
‘CONVENIENTLY FORGET’
The former chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co. until his sudden departure in September, Mr. Gross has produced a 1.5% return this year through the end of April in his new fund at Janus, beating 56% of peers, according to data from research firm Morningstar Inc. Since he began overseeing the fund on Oct. 6, it returned 1%, outperforming 66% of peers.
Mr. Gross, a billionaire who had more than $700 million of his wealth invested in his fund at year-end, also took a swipe at his own industry.
Active asset managers “conveniently forget” that their fees haven’t fallen even as assets have multiplied by a factor of 20 since 1981, Mr. Gross wrote.

Learn more about reprints and licensing for this article.

Recent Articles by Author

Tragedy at BofA as 25-year-old trader dies at industry event

The sudden fatality is the second young employee death at the banking giant in recent weeks, raising questions around culture of long, demanding hours.

BlackRock’s fixed-income CIO says rate cuts, not hikes, key to taming inflation

Federal Reserve’s hawkish policy on interest rates could be fueling the fire as well-heeled investors reap the benefits.

Nippon’s $3.8B stake in Corebridge could be just the start

Japanese life insurer says it wants more US asset manager, insurer.

Going for gold? Silver is shining brighter

Investors are considering the '2nd place' metal as a good bet.

Jefferies risk manager remembers red flags in Archegos trial

Failed Archegos CEO is on trial for alleged racketeering , fraud.

X

Subscribe and Save 60%

Premium Access
Print + Digital

Learn more
Subscribe to Print