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Paul Gambles,
Director MBMG
Investment Advisory |
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Gross profits or Gross negligence?
“Through the Total Return Fund & other strategies, Bill
has created more value for more investors than anyone in the history of our
industry” - Douglas Hodge, PIMCO CEO June 2014
Many investors seemed surprised by the news that “bond king” Bill Gross will
leave PIMCO, the US$2 trillion fixed-interest focused asset management
company that he co-founded in 1971, just when the gold standard had been
abandoned and a whole new world of opportunities was opening up in currency
and fixed income markets.
Gross will join the much-smaller Janus, a firm whose market capitalization
is roughly ‘only’ on a par with Gross’ US$2 billion personal worth,
ostensibly to escape the distractions of running a giant firm and to get
back to his main focus of running his clients’ money.
Gross may have been exceptionally fortunate to time his career so well but
over the last 43 years nobody came close to rivalling his ability to exploit
the opportunity set that had been presented, until Franklin Templeton
unearthed the mercurial talents of Dr. Michael Hasenstab. Nassim Taleb would
probably claim that it’s an accident of history that Gross came to the fore
with his skillset at a time when he, and his investors such as ourselves,
were handsomely rewarded for doing so. Taleb may also say that many equally
capable individuals simply weren’t in the right places or at the right times
as Gross was able to build a behemoth that was sold to German financial
conglomerate Allianz in 2000.
While that may be partially true, Gross has shown a real ability to adapt to
changing economic conditions during those 43 years - ever since around the
time of the Allianz takeover, Gross’ flagship Total Return Fund has earned a
return of 164%, far above the industry’s average of 116%1, in the process
becoming the world’s largest mutual fund. However, some critics would decry
its recent performance, suffering a 2% loss in 20132, lagging its
‘benchmark’ again this year and in today’s instant age of knee-jerk
decisions, suffering nearly a year and a half of outflows that have reduced
the fund from an all-time high of US$293 billion last year to ‘just’ US$222
billion.3 Yet those investors are presumably only at the margins because
Janus’ shares increased by almost half on the announcement of Gross’ plans
whereas Allianz’s share dropped 6%4. This news has considerable
repercussions in the Thai market, where a number of locally offered global
bond funds invest into PIMCO and therefore may be affected by Gross’ move.
We’re already preparing our client communications on this.
To me this is the latest in a trend. Tony Dye was famously fired from
Phillips & Drew in February 2000 for his negative take on growth and
especially tech stocks. Had his employers shown just a little more patience,
they would have seen the value manager vindicated by the tech wreck which
started almost immediately after Dye’s exit, with the NASDAQ falling almost
80%5.
Neil Woodford famously lambasted short termism, corporate greed and a
culture of fear when deciding to turn his back on big corporations and
strike out on his own. He revisited these themes in an excellent interview
on Radio 4 last Friday, calling the investment management profession to
account6.
Martin Gray recently found out that outperforming the benchmark 3-fold for
almost 20 years7 counts for nothing if your public company’s bosses equate
long-term strategy with their plans for the weekend after next.
It’s a sad indictment of our short attention spans that as a society we seem
to value immediacy over quality. Sometimes this is put into perspective for
us and, on the same day that Gross left PIMCO, I was privileged to be at the
funeral of a truly good man - an ex-soldier who’d fought for his country
during WWII; an ex-teacher whose former pupils turned out in astonishing
numbers to pay their last respects to a man who’d taught some of them 40 or
50 years ago, but whose guidance, encouragement and protection they still
remembered very, very fondly; and above all a family man whose family and
friends clearly now have a huge hole in their lives, even if they have so
many fond memories with which to try to plug that hole.
So let’s not go overboard on Bill Gross’ new job, but let’s try to remember
the things that make a difference and which do last even in such an
ephemeral world.
RIP Jim Birtwistle 1925-2014
Footnotes:
1 http://www.economist .com/news/business-and-finance/21620809
2 ibid
3 ibid
4 ibid
5 http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/1bec1c94-2be5-11df-8033-00144feabdc0.
html#axzz3EmxmJAmr
6 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-29371593
7 MAM Focus https://aa29f389331a03bd3ef1-027a1373e6636075db5598015
cb5bde6.ssl.cf3.rackcdn.com/7213-7213_Special SituationsSalesAid.pdf
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