Janus' Bill Gross slams central bankers again, arguing negative rates turn assets into liabilities

Janus' Bill Gross slams central bankers again, arguing negative rates turn assets into liabilities
SEP 07, 2016
Billionaire money manager Bill Gross said negative interest rates are turning assets into a liability stifling the capitalist system. In his monthly investment outlook posted Wednesday, Mr. Gross, 72, reiterated his long-running criticism of central bankers, including Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, for slashing interest rates to zero or below to help raise asset prices in the hope they will trickle down into the economy. It's a plan, Mr. Gross argued, that will fail to produce sustainable economic growth. “Capitalism, almost commonsensically, cannot function well at the zero bound or with a minus sign as a yield,” wrote Mr. Gross, who manages the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund. “$11 trillion of negative yielding bonds are not assets — they are liabilities. Factor that, Ms. Yellen, into your asset price objective.” (More: Don't count small-cap funds out because of looming interest rate hikes) Central banks in Europe and Japan are relying on stimulus packages that include negative deposit rates to fuel inflation and revive the economy. Germany, Switzerland, France, Spain and Japan are among countries that have negative yields, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. While the U.S. hasn't used that tool, Ms. Yellen said last week that further asset purchases must remain part of the Fed's toolkit. Mr. Gross has been sounding the same alarm for so long he might be “compared to a broken watch that is right twice a day but wrong for the other 1,438 minutes,” he wrote. “But believe me: This watch is ticking because of global debt and out-of-date monetary/fiscal policies that hurt rather than heal real economies.” Mr. Gross's $1.5 billion Janus unconstrained fund gained 4.3% this year through Aug. 30, outperforming 61% of its Bloomberg peers.

Latest News

SEC's quarterly reporting retreat meets an investor revolt
SEC's quarterly reporting retreat meets an investor revolt

The Investment Adviser Association, CFP Board, and the CFA Institute warn semiannual filings would widen information gaps and raise costs for advisors and clients.

Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut
Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut

Elsewhere, a Commonwealth team in Massachusetts converts to Cetera, while Janney draws four former Wells Fargo advisors to its Radnor, Pennsylvania office.

Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege
Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege

Clients say he copied the boss on his emails - and now they can't touch their cash.

CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million
CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million

He wired millions to his own accounts and told investors the fund was winning.

OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients
OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients

The partnership arrives as most small business owners near retirement age still don't have a formal succession plan in place.

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.