Gundlach
says purchased 'lots' of Treasuries, Ginnie Maes on
Friday
Send a link to a friend
[June 30, 2015]
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Jeffrey Gundlach, a
widely followed investor who oversees DoubleLine Capital, said in an
interview on Monday his firm had purchased "lots of Treasuries and
Ginnie Maes" on Friday, ahead of new developments in the Greek and
Puerto Rico crises.
|
The U.S. Treasuries market rallied on Monday, with yields falling to
one-week lows, as a breakdown in talks between Greece and its
creditors stoked bets Athens would default on its debt.
"The risk-reward set-up was favorable," said Gundlach, who is
referred to as the new "King of Bonds" for his series of prescient
investment calls. "The 30-year Treasury went to a new high yield and
no other part of the curve did. This was exactly the opposite of
what happened at the low in yields in January."
The 30-year bond <US30YT=RR> was up on Monday more than 2 points in
price for a yield of 3.101 percent, down 15 basis points from
Friday.
Gundlach said he purchased Treasuries and Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed
securities because even if yields had accelerated higher, the view
was that high-yield "junk" bonds and Emerging Market debt would do
worse than Treasuries.
"Also, we had significantly outperformed quarter-to-date, having
been defensive on rates and the thesis was no longer as compelling
with rates up so much," he added.
Gundlach said he knew to purchase long-duration assets such as
Treasuries and Ginnie Maes because the Shanghai Stock Exchange
Composite Index (SHCOMP) was "signaling trouble by collapsing after
blowing off to the upside a la the Nasdaq back in 1999/2000."
Gundlach, who said in May that he purchased some Puerto Rico pension
payment-backed bonds, also told Reuters on Monday he will look to
buy more of that municipal debt if the price is attractive. "But
timing is everything," he said.
[to top of second column] |
Gundlach argued that he favors Puerto Rico pension payment-backed
munis because the government is unlikely to default on these
securities despite their poor legal protection because they are held
mostly by local residents.
Even if there is a restructuring, their cheapness — the 2039 pension
bond last traded at just 41.5 cents on the dollar — offers some
cushion. "I know it is not for everyone but it is one of the more
interesting plays," Gundlach said.
The Los Angeles-based DoubleLine Capital had $73 billion in assets
under management as of March 31.
(Reporting by Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Bernadette Baum and David
Gregorio)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|