Yesterday
Bloomberg reporter Alexis Leondis
took an in-depth look at the "stepchild" of the
Pimco [
profile] family, their equity funds. Bill Gross has been trying to build a solid line of equity funds as far back as the 1980s, and so far he's come up short.
Why? Leondis says that the firm's bond-focused culture -- its rigid "party line," in Gross' words -- means that stocks will always be an afterthought, a tension that caused his equity manager to quit following Gross' first foray into stock in the 1980s. And it doesn't help when Gross makes claims about the coming "death of equities," as he did in his
newsletter last week.
"I can imagine the equity managers cringed" when they heard that, former Pimco exec
Bill Powers told
Bloomberg.
Joshua Brown, VP of investments for
Fusion Analytics Investment Partners, was blunter. "No one should be surprised that Pimco equity funds are a stepchild," he said. "What they have against them is distaste for open-end mutual funds, dislike for equities and the fact that it's a bond shop in everyone's mind."
The other problem is that Gross' equity funds have simply underperformed, by and large. Gross brought in a team from
Franklin Resources to manage
EsQ Pathfinder, Pimco's first stock fund, and the $2.13 billion fund is trailing 62 percent of its peers this year. The $519 million
Pimco Emerging Markets Fund is behind 90 percent of its peers over the last 12 months.
All told, Pimco's four main stock funds make up under 1 percent of the firm's AUM. 
Edited by:
Chris Cumming
Stay ahead of the news ... Sign up for our email alerts now
CLICK HERE