Pimco
CIO Ivascyn says 'late decision-makers' behind
withdrawals
Send a link to a friend
[March 04, 2015]
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Pimco's top investment
officer said on Tuesday that "late decision makers" are largely behind a
rush of withdrawals from its flagship bond fund some five months after
the departure of longtime manager Bill Gross, but the outflows should
taper off before long.
|
Dan Ivascyn, group chief investment officer for Pimco, said in an
interview that many institutional investors take months to decide on
and execute a reallocation from one fund or firm to another. As a
result, it is not surprising that outflows persist so long after
Gross' departure in late September.
Ivasycn's comments came as the firm reported another $8.6 billion of
outflows in February from the Pimco Total Return Fund, bringing
withdrawals to $76.6 billion since Gross moved from Pimco to Janus
Capital Group Inc.
"Not surprised by the outflows," Ivascyn said by phone from the
firm's Newport Beach, California, headquarters. "A lot of the
decisions are now delayed decisions from several months ago. We
expected some of these to ripple through the new year."
The $124.7 billion fund is now fraction of its size nearly two years
ago, when under Gross it ranked as the world's largest mutual fund,
with $292.9 billion in assets in April 2013.
What started as a trickle of redemptions the following month
accelerated as Gross' performance subsequently slipped and he became
embroiled in a leadership squabble when his long-time associate
Mohamed El-Erian left the firm a year ago.
It is not just the total return fund that has suffered: Investors
pulled $150 billion from Pimco's U.S. open-end mutual funds last
year, according to Morningstar data.
Ivascyn said that, despite the very public leadership changes at
Pimco "our organization has remained quite stable."
Once the withdrawals run their course, Pimco will be in "really good
shape," he added.
[to top of second column] |
The outflows have not hurt the Total Return Fund's performance, he
said.
In the five months since Gross left, the fund returned 3.25 percent,
or 0.30 percentage point above the benchmark Barclays U.S. Aggregate
Bond Index, and 0.90 percentage point above the Morningstar
Intermediate Term Bond Average peer group category.
Now overseen by Scott Mather, Mark Kiesel and Mihir Worah, the fund
returned 1.90 percent year-to-date through Feb. 28, beating its
benchmark by 0.76 percent point.
Pacific Investment Management Co, a unit of Allianz SE, had $1.68
trillion in assets under management as of Dec. 31.
(This story has been refiled to fix typographical error in next to
12th paragraph)
(Reporting By Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Dan Burns and Andre Grenon)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|