"Gross Raises U.S. Debt Holdings to Highest Since 2007 (Update1)
By Dakin Campbell
April 13 (Bloomberg) -- Bill Gross, manager of Pacific Investment Management Co.’s $144 billion Total Return Fund, increased his holdings of U.S. government debt to 28 percent in March, the highest percentage in almost two years.
Pimco’s founder and co-chief investment officer boosted government debt holdings from 15 percent in February to the most since April 2007, according to the Newport Beach, California- based company’s Web site. The world’s biggest bond fund’s holdings of mortgage-backed securities dropped to 66 percent of total assets from 86 percent in February.
While the government debt category includes Treasuries, Gross has said that Pimco is not interested in buying the securities. In February, Gross said it was “incumbent” upon the Federal Reserve to buy Treasuries but that he wouldn’t follow the central bank’s lead.
The central bank said March 18 that it would buy up to $300 billion of U.S. debt in an effort to drive down consumer borrowing costs. The day after that announcement, Gross said in an interview on Bloomberg Television that the purchases won’t be enough to awaken the economy.
The Total Return Fund rose 4.8 percent in 2008, beating 93 percent of its peers, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The fund has returned 1.5 percent this year through March, according to Pimco data.
In January, Gross held a negative position in government debt securities such as Treasuries, debt issued by government- backed agencies such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank system or interest-rate derivatives.
Mark Porterfield, a Pimco spokesman, has said the firm doesn’t comment on fund holdings."
No comments:
Post a Comment