Bill Gross's Bond Fund Assets Decline Below $1 Billion

(Bloomberg) Investors keep pulling money from Bill Gross’s bond fund.

The Janus Henderson Global Unconstrained Bond Fund suffered about $60 million of redemptions in December, according to Bloomberg estimates. That lowered assets to $950.4 million from February’s all-time high of $2.24 billion.

Investors have pulled money for 10 consecutive months since the February peak, in part amid misplaced bets that rates on U.S. Treasuries and German bunds would converge, a position it later scaled back. Gross piled up about 4 percent loss last year, underperforming more than 80 percent of peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

A spokesperson for Janus Henderson Group Plc could not immediately be reached for comment via email outside of office hours.

Gross, 74, took over the unconstrained fund in October 2014 after being ousted from Pacific Investment Management Co., where he managed the world’s onetime largest mutual fund, Pimco Total Return. Last year’s slump was one of the toughest in his storied career that dates to 1971.

Gross leveraged up his bond fund through the use of futures during the first half of 2018, only to suffer big losses on those tied to interest rates. He had almost $153 million of losses on interest-rate futures in the first half.

Unconstrained bond funds, which represent a niche within the fixed-income world, free managers like Gross to hold various types of assets, ranging from cash to banks loans and derivatives.

Bets that U.S. 10-year bond yields would narrow their spread over those of similar German debt were mostly losers in 2018. The gap closed at about 2.46 percentage points on Friday.

Estimates for the Janus fund flows are based on the change in assets over the month that isn’t accounted for by performance, fees or reinvested dividends. The numbers may vary from actual figures and from estimates compiled by other data providers.

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