Pimco's Total Return ETF ( BOND ) gains $1B in AUM less than 3 months after launch. BOND is the ETF version of Bill Gross ' $250B Total Return Fund, and its still relatively small size is allowing Gross to do some open-field running and
than she does. I've been a fan of hers for years (and somewhat profitably, I might add. She has sure done better than Bill Gross in some of her forecasts.) Baum demolishes "economist" turned left-wing political activist Paul Krugman here: http
risk-free" in real terms. Bonds are typically the worst performing asset class in periods of high inflation. PIMCO's Bill Gross has expressed significant concerns regarding the expected return bond investors will receive in the coming years. Real Estate
Link to FT article
trouncing the famed Pimco Total Return Fund. The reason is simple; with the $800M-sized BOND, investors are getting Bill Gross as a young man - nimble and able to focus on his best ideas. That's not possible with the $258B Total Return Fund. Post
from using it. Famed investment manager Bill Gross will manage the ETF and will follow the ..... down investment process that leans on Bill Gross and the PIMCO investment committee for ..... with about $100 million in assets, Bill Gross was able to start fresh with a brand
Just two days after JPMorgan ( JPM ) announced a massive $2B trading loss , Pimco's Bill Gross comes to its defense, calling it one of the “best-run banks in the world." It’s a decently capitalized bank, Gross says
Bill Gross manages both, but Harbor is showing a yield in the low 2's and Total Return is in the high 3's. Is anybody aware of a reason for this discrepancy ? Is Gross changing tactics with the much-smaller HABDX ?
call for additional easing at the June FOMC meeting, but worries about a re-run of 2010 and 2011 when - the horror - the Fed let previous QE programs expire without having another set to go. Bill Gross earlier . Sigh. Post your comment!
"Risk markets need more ammo if they are to stay up," tweets Bill Gross . "QE3 getting closer." The S&P is near a 4-year high and the 2-year note yields 0.25%. Has addiction to the Fed gotten