Bill Gross owns majority of Janus bond fund he runs

Billionaire fund manager and family hold shares worth $739 million.
JAN 14, 2015
Bill Gross and his family own more than half of the bond fund he runs on behalf of Janus Capital Group Inc., after acquiring their shares through brokerage accounts at Morgan Stanley and Charles Schwab Corp. Mr. Gross and his family held a 51.2% stake in Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund as of Dec. 31, according to a filing Friday by Denver-based Janus with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The shares had a market value of $739 million, based on net assets of $1.45 billion at year-end. Mr. Gross began running Janus Global Unconstrained on Oct. 6 after his surprise departure from Pacific Investment Management Co., the Newport Beach, Calif.-based company he co-founded in 1971. The fund's assets soared from $13 million after Mr. Gross took over, and Janus Chief Executive Officer Dick Weil disclosed on a Jan. 22 conference call that more than $700 million came from Mr. Gross himself. “William H. Gross, portfolio manager of the fund, is deemed to control the fund by virtue of owning more than 25% of the outstanding shares,” Janus said in today's filing. Mr. Gross's investments helped fuel $2.8 billion of deposits into Janus's bond funds in the fourth quarter and break a streak of 21 straight quarters of investor withdrawals. Janus is counting on Mr. Gross to restore growth at the firm, which at its peak in 2000 had assets of about $334 billion and now manages $183.1 billion, as of Dec. 31. PIMCO RECORD Mr. Gross, 70, is a billionaire who built one of the industry's best long-term records while running the $134.6 billion Pimco Total Return Fund and helped expand Pimco to oversee about $2 trillion at its peak. He left Pimco on Sept. 26 after clashing with senior executives. According to Janus's filing, New York-based Morgan Stanley held 62.5% of the Janus Global Unconstrained's institutional shares on behalf of customers as of Dec. 31. San Francisco-based Charles Schwab held 9.91% of the institutional shares on behalf of clients. With respect to the institutional shares the two brokerages hold for customers, 62.1% represents investments “held beneficially by William H. Gross including his family,” according to the filing. “Mr. Gross (including his family) owns 51.2%” of the fund when all share classes are included.

Latest News

Investor accuses Canaras, U.S. Bank of hiding $50 million CLO loss
Investor accuses Canaras, U.S. Bank of hiding $50 million CLO loss

A trustee says it has no record of the investor now suing it for $50 million

New bill would let advisers unlock accredited investor status for clients
New bill would let advisers unlock accredited investor status for clients

Legislation seeks to loosen access to private markets to include professional advice from RIAs and broker-dealers, not just income or net worth.

More than a quarter of moms are planning to opt out of Trump accounts, survey finds
More than a quarter of moms are planning to opt out of Trump accounts, survey finds

"I just feel like I can get a lot further [by] opening a 529 account," said one respondent to the BabyCenter survey on Trump accounts.

IRA investors keep rushing toward lower-cost mutual funds
IRA investors keep rushing toward lower-cost mutual funds

New ICI research shows these retirement savers pay expense ratios nearly matching industrywide averages, extending years of fee declines

US household wealth grows more liquid than global peers
US household wealth grows more liquid than global peers

UBS data show American net worth is shifting from property to cash and funds faster than in seven other wealthy nations.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.