Gross eats his own cooking at Janus, putting more than $700M in his fund

Gross eats his own cooking at Janus, putting more than $700M in his fund
The former Bond King invested more than $700 million of his own money in his unconstrained bond fund, according to Janus Capital Group CEO Dick Weil. The news sparked a rally in Janus shares.
JAN 14, 2015
Bill Gross invested more than $700 million of his own money in his unconstrained bond fund, Janus Capital Group Inc.'s Chief Executive Officer Dick Weil said Thursday in a conference call with investors and analysts. Mr. Gross is “proud to eat his own cooking,” Mr. Weil said on a call discussing fourth-quarter earnings. Mr. Gross will also manage a new exchange-traded product for the firm, which the firm is planning in coming months, Mr. Weil said. Janus shares rose as much as 9.9%, the most since the firm announced Mr. Gross's decision to join, as it attracted the first net subscriptions in more than five years. Janus drew money across fixed-income funds and there were more of its products on brokerage platforms run by Fidelity Investments and Charles Schwab Corp., Mr. Weil said. “2014 was a major step forward for Janus,” Mr. Weil said. Mr. Gross, a bond legend who surprised the financial world by joining Denver-based Janus, has a history of putting his own money into the funds he manages, a move that can be seen as a vote of confidence in his strategy and can help attract bigger investors. His contribution accounts for a quarter of the $2.8 billion that Janus attracted into its fixed-income funds in the fourth quarter, helping to break a streak of 21 straight quarters of investor withdrawals. Janus shares rose 9.4% to $17.81 Thursday morning in New York, the most since Sept. 26. Janus shares, which surged a record 43% that day, climbed 30% last year, compared with 7.6% for the 18-company S&P Index of asset managers and custody banks. BEATING ESTIMATES Janus Thursday reported fourth-quarter earnings that rose 18% as it broke a 21-quarter streak of net investor withdrawals. Net income increased to $45.2 million, or 24 cents a share, from $38.3 million, or 21 cents, a year earlier, the firm said Thursday in a statement. Earnings beat the 21-cent average per-share estimate of 12 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. Mr. Weil, 51, has raised Janus's profile in the past year, hiring Mr. Gross and buying an exchange-traded product provider. Since taking over in 2010, Mr. Weil had struggled to stem client defections as he expanded the fixed-income team and created a multi-asset investing group. Janus attracted $2 billion net subscriptions in the fourth quarter, as money gathered by fixed-income products offset withdrawals of $800 million from stock funds. Janus had “strong growth on the fixed-income side of the business, much of that related to Bill coming on board and raising some assets,” Michael Kim, an analyst with Sandler O'Neill & Partners LP in New York, said. Mr. Kim has a “hold” recommendation on the shares. The 70-year-old Mr. Gross started overseeing the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund (JUCIX) after surprising executives at Newport Beach, Calif.-based Pimco and its parent Allianz SE with his departure. He had built one of the industry's best long-term records while running the $143.4 billion Pimco Total Return Fund (PTTRX) and helped expand Pimco to oversee about $2 trillion at its peak. The Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, which Mr. Gross has run since Oct. 6, expanded to $1.4 billion in assets as of Dec. 31, from $13 million before he joined Janus, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The fund lost 1.1% in the past three months through Jan. 21, trailing 62% of peers, according to data from Chicago-based research firm Morningstar Inc.

Latest News

Financial dependence on parents persists as retirement concerns grow, Northwestern Mutual finds
Financial dependence on parents persists as retirement concerns grow, Northwestern Mutual finds

As retirement costs climb, millions of millennials and Generation X adults continue relying on parental support, highlighting obstacles to retirement readiness. 

Former Detroit Tigers prospect moves from Edward Jones to LPL
Former Detroit Tigers prospect moves from Edward Jones to LPL

Les Smith, who once played alongside future MLB stars Eugenio Suárez and Nick Castellanos, says lessons from professional baseball helped fuel his transition to independent wealth management after 11 years at Edward Jones.

Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals
Mariner discloses cloud breach impacting nearly 9,000 individuals

A November hacking incident involving cloud apps used by three employee exposed names, Social Security numbers, and other account data, the mega-RIA said.

Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports.
Merrill broker, whose name was in the Epstein files, has left the firm: Reports.

Paul V. Morris worked at multiple firms across Wall Street and most recently in Manhattan for Merrill Lynch.

Andrew Left found guilty of securities fraud scheme
Andrew Left found guilty of securities fraud scheme

Convicted by an LA jury on 13 of 17 counts, the Citron Research founder and activist short seller now is now facing a statutory 25-year federal prison sentence.

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.