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			 Weekly financial magazine Barron's is not featuring Gross on its 
			Barron's Roundtable this January, according to two sources familiar 
			with the matter. Instead, Gundlach, who has often been critical of 
			Gross's investment calls, was added to the panel of investors. 
			 
			It is unclear if Gross, who had been a member of the Roundtable for 
			more than a decade, is off the panel permanently or if he is just 
			taking a break. 
			 
			E-mails and calls to Gross and a spokeswoman for Janus Capital Group 
			<JNS.N>, where he is a portfolio manager, were not returned. 
			Gundlach declined to comment. 
			 
			Barron's deputy managing editor Lauren Rublin said she could not 
			discuss Gross's Roundtable status until Saturday morning, when the 
			next issue of the magazine will be published. A spokeswoman for 
			Barron's publisher, News Corp's <NWSA.O> Dow Jones unit, said it did 
			not comment on coverage before it is published. 
			  
			The twice-a-year discussions among the investors attending the 
			Roundtable, are turned into a three-part series in the magazine, 
			usually including front-page billing. Each investor provides their 
			predictions for the markets and the economy, and highlights the 
			investment ideas they think will make money. 
			 
			Dow Jones says Barron's readership, which averaged 436,000 in the 
			third quarter of last year, has an average household net worth of 
			about $3 million. The chance to get extensive exposure to that 
			audience means that a place on the Roundtable is coveted by some 
			investors. 
			 
			Gross, 71, joined Janus after his departure in September 2014 from 
			Pimco, the firm he co-founded and had built into a $2 trillion 
			powerhouse. 
			 
			Barron's Roundtable veteran Scott Black of Delphi Management 
			confirmed on Friday that Gross was not at this week's Roundtable in 
			New York City. Black said about Gundlach: "He was very impressive 
			and he was very knowledgeable. I thought he was very smart and well 
			prepared." 
			 
			In 2011, Barron's anointed Gundlach, 56, as the new "King of Bonds" 
			in a cover story. 
			LACKLUSTER RESULTS 
			 
			Gross has posted lackluster results since going to Janus. 
			 
			The Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, which Gross began managing 
			in October 2014, had a negative return of 0.72 percent in 2015, 
			trailing 41 percent of its peers, according to Morningstar. 
			 
			
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			Gross's surprising exit from Pimco came after he had learned that 
			top executives at Pimco and Allianz SE <ALVG.DE>, the German insurer 
			that owns it, had grown tired of his leadership and were weighing a 
			change. 
			 
			Gundlach's firm, DoubleLine Capital, is thriving on the back of a 
			number of very prescient investment calls. 
			 
			Last year, Gundlach correctly predicted that oil prices would 
			plunge, junk bonds would live up to their name and China's slowing 
			economy would pressure emerging markets. In 2014, Gundlach correctly 
			forecast U.S. Treasury yields would fall, not rise as many others 
			had expected. 
			 
			Back in 2014, Gross approached Gundlach and said he was about to be 
			fired by Pimco and broached the possibility of joining forces with 
			Gundlach. 
			 
			Discussing their potential legacies, Gundlach said Gross at that 
			meeting spun an analogy to National Basketball Association star 
			players Kobe Bryant and the younger LeBron James. "I am Kobe. You 
			are LeBron James," Gross told Gundlach. "I have five rings, you have 
			two rings - probably going to five,” a reference to the number of 
			NBA championships the two players have each won. 
			 
			Those discussions didn't lead to a partnership, and Gross instead 
			went to Janus. 
			 
			(Reporting By Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Martin Howell) 
			[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			 
			
			  
			
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