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The latest round of volatility in the bond market may be nerve-wracking, but it can also be a great opportunity, according to Pimco chief investment officer Dan Ivascyn. Ivascyn is also the portfolio manager of the Morningstar 5-star rated Pimco Income Fund (PIMIX), which has a 5.46% 30-day SEC yield, according to Morningstar . Bond yields move inversely to prices, so when prices go down, yields go up. He likes agency mortgage-backed securities, very high quality corporate bonds and some asset-backed securities in very seasoned pools of mortgages. "For the patient investor, with a two- to three-year type horizon, you will be well rewarded to shift out of cash, [and] lock in some of these yields," Ivascyn said.
Persons: Dan Ivascyn, Pimco, Ivascyn, He's Organizations: SEC
The Pimco Multisector Bond Active ETF (PYLD) launched in June, giving investors a way to follow one of the biggest names in fixed income during the volatile bond market. As the fixed income ETF market matures, major asset managers are trying their hand at multisector bond funds. Recent launches include Capital Group's U.S. Multisector Income ETF (CGMS) and BlackRock's Flexible Income ETF (BINC) , which is co-managed by Rick Rieder , the firm's chief investment officer for global fixed income. For financial advisors or investors who want to make investment decisions themselves, there are more targeted bond funds available. "There's a pretty long runway for investors to increase their allocation to fixed income.
Persons: Rick Rieder, Dan Ivascyn, Sonali Pier, D.J, Tierney, you've, Schwab, Schwab's Tierney Organizations: Treasury, Capital, Multisector, Pimco, CNBC, Schwab Asset Management, Fed Locations: Capital Group's, U.S, iShares
Dec 22 (Reuters) - Scott Minerd, global chief investment officer at investment and advisory firm Guggenheim Partners and a prominent Wall Street bond investor, has died, his firm said on Thursday. During his 25-year stint with Guggenheim, Minerd became a prolific commentator on financial markets and was often quoted by the media. He will be greatly missed by all," Mark Walter, chief executive and a founder of Guggenheim Partners, said in the firm's statement. Guggenheim said it had implemented a succession plan, with Anne Walsh, managing partner and CIO of Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, assuming many of Minerd's responsibilities on an interim basis. Minerd was regarded in the past few years as one of the U.S. "bond kings," along with Jeffrey Gundlach, chief executive of DoubleLine, and Dan Ivascyn, chief investment officer of bond giant PIMCO.
Harin de Silva is on the small investment committee for Pimco's Private income Fund, which includes Group CIO Dan Ivascyn. Core Strategies, also recently took a personal leave of absence from the firm. Pimco's co-head of special situations, Harin de Silva, has taken a personal leave of absence from the firm, a company spokesperson confirmed Wednesday. De Silva is co-head of special situations with executive vice president Kristofer Kraus, who is a portfolio manager on the speciality finance team. During de Silva's leave, Pimco has placed portfolio manager Kristofer Kraus, who is on the speciality finance team, on the PIF investment committee.
"There will be impacts, there’s correlations ... some market volatility, and then how it weighs in the global growth picture," said Paul Malloy, head of municipals at Vanguard. The wild swings in the pound have ricocheted across currency markets, where volatility was already climbing. According to the widely watched Deutsche Bank Currency Volatility Index , volatility across currencies on Wednesday hit its highest level since the March 2020 COVID-19- induced market meltdown, jumping more than 20% from levels last week. Closely followed indicators of financial stress remain contained. U.S. stock market volatility as measured by the "fear index," the VIX (.VIX), has also climbed in recent days but remains below its 2022 highs.
WASHINGTON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - The collapse of the British pound and subsequent sell off in the country's bond market in recent days do not pose systemic risks but will affect global markets, PIMCO chief investment officer Dan Ivascyn told the CNBC Seeking Alpha conference in New York. Ivascyn added that the Bank of England's decision overnight to prop up the bond market was a short-term fix that would not address waning investor confidence in British policy. Since Friday's UK mini-budget budget flagged 45 billion pounds ($48 billion) worth of unfunded tax cuts, sterling has lost 6% of its value and hit record lows while British bond prices soared. The chaos in a major developed economy adds to unease already generated by sharp interest rate rises from the United States and elsewhere. Register now for FREE unlimited access to Reuters.com RegisterReporting by Davide Barbuscia; writing by Michelle priceOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
The U.S. is likely headed toward a recession but there's a chance for the downturn to be comparatively mild due to strong underlying fundamentals, according to Pimco bond expert Dan Ivascyn. While he said he still sees a retrenchment coming, he expects strength from consumer and business balance sheets to offset the damage. Our thinking is that it will potentially be a fairly mild recession," Ivascyn told CNBC's Leslie Picker. "One of the reasons why we feel that way is that initial conditions, you know, look look pretty good as the consumer balance sheet [is] quite strong, corporate balance sheets in most areas of the credit markets are quite strong." "All areas that tend to be weak links in recessionary environments have pretty strong fundamentals," he added.
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