Sentences with phrase «largest bond fund managers»

Pimco, one of the world's largest bond fund managers, and widely followed Guggenheim Partners are among the investors who say benchmark 10 - year Treasuries yielding 3 percent - now within reach - are too hard to resist.
Fixed - income investors and large bond fund managers are buying CRE - CLOs, which is creating a permanent term financing tool for bridge lenders, notes Felix Gutnikov, a principal and executive vice president of origination at Thorofare Capital, a loan origination and servicing company.
Fixed - income investors and large bond fund managers are buying CRE - CLOs, which is creating a permanent term financing tool for bridge lenders.

Not exact matches

Famed bond fund manager Bill Gross attacked the use of negative rates as an attempt to mask the symptoms of an unhealthy global economy, while Ray Dalio, the head of the world's largest hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, has recently argued that negative rates will be ineffective at boosting growth.
Pension fund managers played a large role in the junk bonding of industry in the 1980s.
The world's largest money managers — companies like Blackrock, Vanguard, or Fidelity — manage trillions of investor assets in stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, and more.
But the company we keep is good, including Warren Buffett and most recently, Bill Gross of PIMCO (manager of the country's largest bond fund).
Portfolio managers and traders from the world's largest pension funds, asset managers and insurance companies also use bond ETFs.
Today, we're one of the largest municipal bond fund managers in the nation1, and have more than $ 71 billion in municipal bond assets under management.2
The Fund's active management draws upon the expertise of Eaton Vance's municipal bond team, among America's largest and most experienced municipal bond managers.
William H. Gross, the manager of the country's largest bond mutual fund, has a solution for that: He is offering to do it free.
Portfolio managers and traders from the world's largest pension funds, asset managers and insurance companies also use bond ETFs.
To be more specific, an ETF is an investment fund that owns large swaths of investments (stocks, bonds, real estate, etc.) that are selected and managed by a fund manager; those investments are then sliced up into millions of pieces and sold to individual investors on exchanges.
Pension funds and their bond managers have not been large players in this market.
The fund's largest holdings include the usual suspects — government bonds, a couple of ETFs (Canadian Dollar hedged, of course), and banks that aren't Bank of Montreal, because apparently this fund manager WANTS to get fired.
Bill Gross, manager of the world's largest bond fund, urged fellow members of the «privileged 1 percent,» earning the highest incomes, to support higher U.S. taxes on carried interest and capital gains to help the economy.
It is also less probable (though not impossible) that a bond fund manager will underperform his benchmark by a large margin, relative to an equity manager.
Because managers Dan Fuss and Kathleen Gaffney typically own a large helping of high - yield, or junk, bonds (those rated double - B or lower), as well as bonds from developing nations, the fund took a hit when investors bailed out of anything smacking of risk during the financial crisis and rushed into Treasuries.
Likewise, Dodge & Cox is a stock - heavy manager, and their largest funds made a big losing bet on financial stocks last year, which, combined with a relative lack of bond assets to buffer them, didn't serve the firm (or their funds» investors) very well.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z