The Borneo Post

Gross’ war against Pimco ends with public feel-good moment

-

FOR BILL GROSS, the long goodbye is finally over.

More than two years after the legendary bond manager was ousted from Pacific Investment Management Co. – the firm he co-founded and built into a US$ 2 trillion asset manager – he settled a bitter legal dispute with a public rapprochem­ent.

Pimco, where Gross shot to fame as the king of the bond market, agreed to pay US$ 81 million ( RM364.4 million) – a modest sum given the fortune he amassed during his 43 years there. Pimco also agreed to dedicate a new “Founders Room” at its headquarte­rs in honour of Gross and others who launched the firm in 1971, a nod to his role as its most famous market prognostic­ator and manager of the Pimco Total Return Fund, once the world’s largest mutual fund. Pimco also named him as a director emeritus of the firm’s charitable foundation.

For Gross, now 72, the developmen­t brings an end to a long struggle in the twilight of his career to overcome his split with the firm he co-founded and turn the page at Janus. Pimco faced a torrent of redemption­s after Gross’s exit in 2014, but that money didn’t follow him en masse to his new home.

For Pimco, the resolution offers the firm, which managed US$ 1.5 trillion as of Dec 31, a chance to move on from Gross’s legacy, according to William Thompson, Pimco’s CEO from 1993 through 2008.

“It’s a new day,” Thompson, who remains friendly with Gross and associates at Pimco, said in a telephone interview. “You’ve got to look forward. If you don’t spend most of your time time focused on today and tomorrow, then you’re probably not doing the right thing for your investors.”

Gross sued Newport Beach, California-based Pimco, contending he was ousted by a “cabal” of executives who wanted a larger share of his bonus, which was US$ 290 million in 2013. He also asserted in the suit that the executives wanted to offer more high-fee products to investors rather than Pimco’s traditiona­l bond funds. Gross, who didn’t reply to a request for comment, now runs the US$ 1.9 billion Janus Global Unconstrai­ned Bond Fund.

“Bill Gross has always been larger-than-life,” Dan Ivascyn, Pimco’s group chief investment officer, said in a statement announcing the agreement. “Bill has had an enormous influence on Pimco and the careers of many who have passed through its halls. He built this business from the ground up and we have great respect and admiration for his talents.”

After his departure, Gross set up a Janus office at a tower with a view of Pimco’s headquarte­rs from his window. His unconstrai­ned fund has had a total return of 5.1 per cent since he took over management in October 2014, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with a six per cent return during the period for the US$ 3.5 billion Pimco Unconstrai­ned Bond Fund, which uses a similar goanywhere strategy.

Gross’s reputation and Pimco’s growth soared after the 2008 financial crisis, when his Total Return Fund posted gains as markets crashed. Assets at the fund soared to almost US$ 300 billion by the first quarter of 2013, before investors spooked by the prospect of rising interest rates began pulling money.

Within Pimco, tensions mounted as younger managers resented Gross’s authoritar­ian management style. Mohamed ElErian, Pimco’s chief executive officer, resigned in early 2014, prompting more infighting and preceding the push that ended with Gross leaving a hand-written resignatio­n letter minutes before US markets opened on Sept 26, 2014.

“Driven by a lust for power, greed, and a desire to improve their own financial position and reputation at the expense of investors and decency, a cabal of Pimco managing directors plotted to drive founder Bill Gross out of Pimco in order to take, without compensati­on, Gross’s percentage ownership in the profitabil­ity of Pimco,” according to his complaint. It alleged that Pimco executives’ “improper, dishonest, and unethical behaviour must now be exposed.”

The trial was scheduled to begin in September. — WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Gross, co-founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in Beverly Hills, California, on May 25, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Gross, co-founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in Beverly Hills, California, on May 25, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia