Pimco says Bill Gross leaked bonus data, showed bad faith


File pic of Bill Gross, who runs the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund.

NEW YORK: Pacific Investment Management Co accused former star bond fund manager Bill Gross of leaking confidential bonus data and exercising "bad faith" in pursuing a $200 million lawsuit over his sudden departure from the firm in September 2014.

In a court filing dated Tuesday, Pimco said Gross admitted to having revealed 2013 compensation data to a Bloomberg News columnist after leaving Pimco, as part of his "sad obsession" with attacking the firm he co-founded and his former colleagues.

Pimco said Gross should be ordered to turn over materials it is entitled to see and be sanctioned for dragging his heels.

It cited, as an example, Gross' alleged failure to turn over emails about his exit from Pimco with the chief executive of his current employer, Janus Capital Group Inc, which Pimco said it uncovered through a subpoena to Janus itself.

Pimco, a unit of German insurer Allianz SE, said Gross' "egregious misconduct" supports its argument that it would have had "good cause" for terminating his employment.

In his lawsuit filed last October, Gross claimed that Newport Beach, California-based Pimco forced him to resign so it could distribute his bonus to others.

Patricia Glaser, Gross' lawyer, in a statement on Wednesday said Pimco's "off-topic insults and baseless accusations" an were an attempt to deflect blame from its own misconduct.

"The only party trying to play 'hide the ball' is Pimco," she said.

Both sides are expected to appear in the California Superior Court in Santa Ana on Sept. 16.

Pimco said Gross' disclosures to the columnist at Bloomberg, which competes with Reuters News, included data for one-time Chief Executive Mohamed El-Erian, his successor Douglas Hodge and Daniel Ivascyn, who succeeded Gross as chief investment officer.

It also said that Gross admitted to giving compensation details to eight or nine managing directors prior to leaving Pimco.

That revelation included a note to recipients, "let's get our fair share in December," according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to discuss the note.

Gross denied that Pimco had a right to take any adverse action over the disclosures, according to Tuesday's filing.

Pimco's lawyer, David Boies, said in a statement that "evidence of misconduct" and the unresolved disputes may leave the firm with "no choice but to bring claims against Mr. Gross for his improper actions."

Gross is worth $2.4 billion according to Forbes magazine, and has pledged to donate proceeds from his lawsuit to charity.

At Pimco, he built the flagship Pimco Total Return fund into the world's largest bond fund. Gross now runs the much smaller Janus Global Unconstrained Bond fund.

The Star Christmas Special Promo: Save 35% OFF Yearly. T&C applies.

Monthly Plan

RM 13.90/month

Best Value

Annual Plan

RM 12.33/month

RM 8.02/month

Billed as RM 96.20 for the 1st year, RM 148 thereafter.

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Business News

Bursa Malaysia ends morning session easier
Malaysia's official reserve assets at US$124.12bil as at end-Nov 2025
MSC appoints co-group CEOs
Asian stocks set for strongest annual jump in eight years on AI bets
China's factory activity edges back to growth in December, private PMI shows
Oil slips as Brent heads for longest stretch of annual losses in 2025
Bursa Malaysia poised to wrap 2025 on a multi-year high
Ringgit opens higher as US$ slips after FOMC minutes
Trading ideas: Genting, Sunview, Apex Healthcare, Cypark, Citaglobal, HeiTech Padu, Insas, Propel Global, Solar District, TT Vision, UEM Sunrise
S&P 500, Nasdaq end down in holiday-thin trade

Others Also Read