Bill Gross owns majority of Janus bond fund he runs

Billionaire fund manager and family hold shares worth $739 million.
JAN 14, 2015
By  Bloomberg
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

What advisors need to know about SECURE 2.0’s impact on retirement income planning
What advisors need to know about SECURE 2.0’s impact on retirement income planning

Catch-up contributions, required minimum distributions, and 529 plans are just some of the areas the Biden-ratified legislation touches.

EToro to tokenize US stocks on Ethereum network for 24/7 trading
EToro to tokenize US stocks on Ethereum network for 24/7 trading

Following a similar move by Robinhood, the online investing platform said it will also offer 24/5 trading initially with a menu of 100 US-listed stocks and ETFs.

GTCR to acquire FMG Suite, expanding its wealth tech portfolio
GTCR to acquire FMG Suite, expanding its wealth tech portfolio

The private equity giant will support the advisor tech marketing firm in boosting its AI capabilities and scaling its enterprise relationships.

$29B Lido Advisors expands in Utah with Olympus Wealth Management
$29B Lido Advisors expands in Utah with Olympus Wealth Management

The privately backed RIA's newest partner firm brings $850 million in assets while giving it a new foothold in the Salt Lake City region.

Annuities hit new $223B high in H1 2025, LIMRA says
Annuities hit new $223B high in H1 2025, LIMRA says

The latest preliminary data show $117 billion in second-quarter sales, but hints of a slowdown are emerging.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.