Bob Reynolds continues to add familiar ex-
Fidelity faces to his new team at
Putnam. Putnam just confirmed that
David Glancy -- former manager of
Fidelity Capital & Income and the
Fidelity Leveraged Stock Fund and founder of the now-defunct hedge fund firm
Andover Capital Advisors -- has joined the Boston-based
Power Financial subsidiary as a managing director and portfolio manager. (Sam Mamudi broke the news in
Wall Street Journal's Thursday Fund Track
column.) Watch for Glancy to make his mark in Putnam in the coming months with new offerings.
Reynolds described Glancy as "another outstanding investor" with "unique skill" and a "great long-term track record." He added that Glancy's investment style is "perfect for this type of market."
"He's someone I've known for a number of years," Reynolds told
MFWire in an interview. "This [hiring Glancy] was an opportunity we couldn't pass up."
Reynolds confirmed that Glancy will be using his "unique talent" for investing in companies across their entire capital structure to create at least two new funds for Putnam, with a rough target launch date of early Q2. One fund would be a "pure equity play," Reynolds said, while the other would look at all three parts of a company's capital structure.
"There is no fund like that at Putnam," Reynolds said, adding that Putnam could also launch institutional, co-mingled pools using the same strategies "rather quickly."
Glancy left Fidelity to found Andover back in 2003 (see
MFWire, 7/16/2003). He joins a long list of Fido alums that have followed Reynolds to Putnam, including senior managing director
Jeff Carney, portfolio managers
Robert Ewing and
Nick Thakore, controller
Andra Bolotin, chief financial officer
Clare Richer and managing director
Ed Murphy (see
MFWire,
10/09/08,
10/21/08 and
12/2/08, and see our sister publication,
The 401kWire, 2/3/09).
Putnam also unveiled four new analyst hires: insurance analyst
Shobha Frey, who hails from
K Capital Partners; technology and telecom analyst
George Gianarikas, who hails from
Wellington Management; consumer staples analyst
Lucas Klein, who hails from
RiverSource; and consumer sectors analyst
Vinay Shah, who hails from Fidelity and
Morgan Stanley.
Also in Thursday's column, Mamudi highlights January fund flows across money market, stock and bond funds ($68.3 billion, $11.7 billion and $14.3 billion, respectively). Yet Lipper's
Tom Roseen cautions that the seemingly positive numbers may simply represent "seasonal bias." 
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