Quote from Maverick74:
They are not earning 1%, they are making 5% to 10%. They are not buying them for the coupon, they are buying them for the price appreciation. Treasury bond funds are up 10% to 30% the last year. That is not coming from the yield.
Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Bill Gross, who runs the worldâs biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., reduced holdings of U.S. government-related debt in July as yields tumbled.
The companyâs $239.3 billion Total Return Fundâs investment in the debt
was cut to 54 percent of assets last month, from 63 percent in June, according to the website of Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. The share of emerging-market debt increased to a record 11 percent, from 10 percent. The fund also boosted mortgage debt to 18 percent, the most since September.
The fund has returned 12.8 percent in the past 12 months, beating 70 percent of its peers, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It gained 1.95 percent over the past month, a performance superior to 78 percent of competitors. Pimco, a unit of the Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, managed $1.1 trillion of assets as of June 30.
Pimcoâs U.S. government-related debt category can include conventional and inflation-linked Treasuries, agency debt, interest-rate derivatives, Treasury futures and options and bank debt backed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., according to the firmâs website.
Gross boosted the Total Return Fundâs mortgage composition in July from 16 percent in June. It increased its high-yield holdings to 4 percent, from the 3 percent level, and non-U.S. developed debt to 5 percent from 3 percent. It increased its net cash-and-equivalent position to negative 12 percent from negative 15 percent.
Eight-Month High
Gross boosted the fundâs composition of government-related debt to an eight-month high in June, following weaker-than- expected economic reports.
He said earlier this month that the Fed is unlikely to raise interest rates for two to three years as it seeks to keep the economy from slipping back into recession.
The Fed retained a commitment to keep its benchmark interest rate close to zero for an âextended periodâ of time in its statement on Aug. 10, holding the target lending rate for overnight lending between banks at zero to 0.25 percent.
âWhen you analyze that portion of the curve, it says the Fed is on hold for a long, long time,â Gross, said on Aug. 6 during a radio interview on âBloomberg Surveillanceâ with Tom Keene. âWhen you get down to 50 basis points on two-years, thatâs giving you a signal that thereâs not much left on the table.â
Two-Year Note
Two-year note yields touched a record low 0.4892 percent on Aug. 11, a day after the central bankâs decision to reinvest principal payments on mortgage assets it holds into U.S. debt to support the economy.
http://noir.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aowsLKb6uUcg
Mr. Gross has great success in talking his book. And the followers are laughing with him, too. 12.8 % is an excellent result taking nto consideration the pure size of PIMCO´s holdings. The cut in government expousre is self-explanatory. I will not call for a top in T Bonds, but the FED announcement to buy at the long end "helps" the exit strategy not only of PIMCO, it helps also to bring "cash" into the market which needs to be reinvested. As I understand Gross lately in an interview IG corporate debt is his next large investment target. Corporate America will need "it".