Business Standard

Pimco co-founder says executives plotted his ouster to get his bonus

- BLOOMBERG 10 October BILL GROSS Co-founder, Pimco

Bill Gross is taking a big swing at Pimco. Landing the blow won’t be easy. The co-founder of bond giant Pacific Investment Management decried the way executives formed a “cabal” to force him out in an alleged plot to divvy up his 20 per cent share of the bonus pool.

While Gross’s lawsuit gives his side of the internal war that led to his departure, what it doesn’t mention is any written employment contract that would bar him from being shown the door.

“You can’t get more sophistica­ted than these guys,” said attorney Gregory Aldisert. “But without a written contract he would likely be terminable at will.”

Gross left Pimco last year, days before the end of the third quarter. In his lawsuit, he said the timing wasn’t a coincidenc­e: It was done to avoid paying him a large chunk of an annual bonus totalling $250 million.

Both companies reject the lawsuit, filed in California state court, as being “without merit.”

Aldisert, of the law firm Kinsella Weitzman Iser Kump & Aldisert in Santa Monica, said it’s hard to evaluate the merits of a lawsuit based only on the initial complaint. Still, Gross’s claims that he had an enforceabl­e agreement based on a meeting shortly before he was terminated, and that his election to a five-year term as chief investment officer guaranteed his employment, appear “weak,” the lawyer said.

Greg Doll, a litigator with Doll Amir & Eley in Los Angeles, was less charitable. He called the case an attempt at historical spin “with a lawsuit attached to it.”

“Gross is using the California litigation privilege for a well-orchestrat­ed PR campaign,” Doll said.

Gross’s lawyer, Patricia Glaser, said the lack of a written contract doesn’t bar his suit, and labelled the contention the case is a public relations ploy “punditry from the cheap seats.”

“There’s plenty of written material that supports his claims,” Glaser said.

Gross said Allianz Chief Executive Officer Michael Diekmann offered him a deal about a week before his September 2014 ouster. Under it, Gross would assume a reduced role and have his bonus cut in half “to placate” managing directors seeking more money. A few days later, Pimco executives revoked the deal, Gross said. Instead, they told him he could stay at the company until December, or be terminated immediatel­y.

Doll said such a constructi­ve terminatio­n claim implies Gross’s life was made so miserable he was forced to leave. Making that stick, however, will be tough, the lawyer said, since the company wanted to move away from Gross’s conservati­ve investment strategy.

“Changing the direction of the company doesn’t count as constructi­ve terminatio­n,” said Doll. “On the other hand, he’s got some credibilit­y in the sense that he built the company, ran it for 40 years and did a fine job.”

Doll and Aldisert aren’t involved in Gross’s case.

Gross also says he was wrongfully deprived of his bonus, an argument Doll sees as more promising, and a claim Glaser said is the essence of her client’s lawsuit.

A copy of Pimco’s profitshar­ing plan was included with Gross’s complaint, filed Thursday in state court in Santa Ana, not far from the firm’s Newport Beach headquarte­rs. The document says employees are entitled to their bonus for the quarter before the one in which they depart.

The plan states that a participan­t isn’t entitled to a bonus for the quarter in which they leave unless it was the result of death or permanent disability. Gross said in his lawsuit that Pimco’s “usual custom and practice was to pay departing employees an appropriat­e share for partially completed quarters.”

Glaser disputed that the language of the profit-sharing agreement implies Gross isn’t entitled to the bonus for his last quarter.

Doll said that an argument Gross was forced out because Pimco didn’t want to pay him may work if the case gets to trial.

“It’s the kind of argument that would have some traction with a jury,” he said.

For Gross, 71, who’s worth about $2 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es index, the fight doesn’t seem to be about the money — he pledges to give any award or settlement to charity. It may be more about his reputation and how history will portray a storied career in money management, the lawyers said.

The lawsuit contains Gross’s account of the events leading to his ouster, a move that prompted record redemption­s from Pimco, which managed about $2 trillion in assets at its 2013 peak. He portrays himself as an old-school, principled advocate for customers —a champion of lower fees and traditiona­l, lower-risk bond investment­s.

His antagonist­s are depicted in the lawsuit as the more modern Wall Street archetype — inclined toward riskier assets and higher-fee products to feed personal wealth at customer expense.

Gross said in May he’d been a “wimp” for not standing up for himself. Now, he says he wants to expose “improper, dishonest, and unethical behaviour” by the managers who ousted him.

 ??  ?? “I am standing up for improper, dishonest, and unethical behaviour by the managers who ousted me”
“I am standing up for improper, dishonest, and unethical behaviour by the managers who ousted me”

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