Bill Miller to start fund with son under the family name

The Miller Income Opportunity Trust, to be run by the famed Legg Mason money manager and his son, seeks high income from a “wide array of sources” by identifying “mispriced” investment opportunities.
JAN 06, 2014
After three decades of managing money on behalf of Legg Mason Inc. (LM), Bill Miller is going to run a mutual fund under his own name. The Miller Income Opportunity Trust (LMOPX) last week filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to sell shares to the public. The fund, to be run by Mr. Miller and his son, Bill Miller IV, will seek to produce a high level of income from a “wide array of sources” by identifying “mispriced” investment opportunities, according to the Dec. 13 filing. The fund will be overseen by LMM, an investment advisory firm that is owned in equal parts by the Millers and Legg Mason. The older Miller will run the fund and his son will be assistant portfolio manager. Renowned for besting the benchmark S&P 500 for 15 years in a row, Bill Miller stumbled during the recession with subpar returns, only to enjoy a renaissance in the past two years in a “go-anywhere” fund that bears some similarities to the one he's starting now. Mr. Miller currently oversees the $1.78 billion Legg Mason Opportunity Trust, which has returned 60% this year, more than double the 28% gain for the S&P 500. The fund has generated an average annual gain of 25% during the past five years, ranking it among the top 3 percent of peers with a similar mandate, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. INCOME FUND While Opportunity Trust has the leeway to invest across asset classes, its holdings have generally consisted of publicly and privately traded equities. Common stocks comprised 99.8% of the opportunity trust's assets as of Sept. 30, according to regulatory filings, with some of its largest stakes consisting of investments in Genworth Financial Inc., MGIC Investment Corp. and Delta Air Lines Inc. In contrast, Mr. Miller's new fund will focus on income, investing during normal market conditions in “cash-distributing” equities, fixed-income securities, derivatives and other financial instruments of issuers worldwide. Annual operating expenses aren't expected to exceed 1.25% in the Class A shares, the filing said. “The ability to tactically move across asset classes and up and own the capital structure is intended to allow the fund to access the greatest yield and valuation opportunities,” the Dec. 13 filing said. MILLER'S STREAK Mr. Miller has been running the high-income strategy through a separate account, funded in part by him and other Legg Mason executives, that had a market value of about $38.6 million as of Sept. 30. This account has generated an average annual return of 27%, not counting management fees, since its inception in April 2009, according to the prospectus. Mr. Miller joined Legg Mason in 1981 and founded the firm's first mutual fund. That fund, the Legg Mason Capital Management Value Trust, outperformed the S&P 500 for 15 years through 2005, generating an average annual return of 15.7% during the period. The streak came to an end in 2006, when the $21 billion value trust rose 5.9%, trailing all 107 competing “multicap value” mutual funds tracked by Bloomberg. During the 2008 credit crisis, the Value Trust lost 55% by betting on financial stocks, prompting a wave of withdrawals. In April 2012, Mr. Miller left the value trust, which currently has about $2.5 billion in net assets. (Bloomberg News)

Latest News

Supreme Court bars activist investors from suing funds under investor law
Supreme Court bars activist investors from suing funds under investor law

Saba pushed; the justices pushed back - and the SEC keeps the gavel.

North Carolina court strikes down wealth firm's non-compete and non-solicit as overbroad
North Carolina court strikes down wealth firm's non-compete and non-solicit as overbroad

Two restrictive covenants gone in one ruling - and the drafting flaw is everywhere.

The wealth trap: Why feeling rich matters more than being rich
The wealth trap: Why feeling rich matters more than being rich

Clients' everyday realities, anxieties, and aspirations naturally change as they go up the wealth scale – and that has profound implications for advisors helping them find what "enough" really means.

Orion's new King of Prussia hub reflects 'AI-native workforce' strategy
Orion's new King of Prussia hub reflects 'AI-native workforce' strategy

The RIA technology giant's new office features a fitness center, café and outdoor community spaces, including a beehive, picnic area and herb garden for over 100 employees.

Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades
Endowments and foundations turn to alternatives as confidence in return targets fades

Liquidity risk overtakes access as the top concern for E&Fs as private markets dominate portfolios.

SPONSORED Estate planning isn't a service add-on. It's your retention strategy.

As $84 trillion prepares to change hands, advisors who treat estate planning as peripheral are quietly building a sieve, not a book.

SPONSORED Why strategy matters more than performance

In volatile markets, the advisors who win aren't the ones with the best calls - they're the ones whose clients stay the course.