They're popping the champagne corks in Denver, Colorado, where fund management firm Janus Capital Group, Inc. resides. Shares of Janus surged more than 43% on today, inflating the company's market value by nearly $1 billion. Investors figure the sudden and unexpected hiring of legendary bond fund manager Bill Gross will generate massive amounts of new business for Janus.
Yet, it may be time to put the cork into the champagne bottle. The road ahead for Bill Gross -- and the bond market -- is likely to be much more challenging.
Make no mistake, Bill Gross is one of the brightest minds in the bond business. His wise prognostications helped draw $270 billion into his firm's Pimco Total Return Fund (Nasdaq: PTTRX). And Janus executives hope he will have a similar magic touch at his new firm.
Even before his arrival, Janus rebounded from its tarnished dot-com legacy and now manages more than $30 billion in bond assets. According to various media reports, Gross will oversee Janus' Global Unconstrained Bond Fund (Nasdaq: JUCAX) -- which was launched in May 2014 -- and he will also help further develop the firm's fixed-income investment strategies.
An unexpectedly long rally
When I started on Wall Street in the early 1990's, my new colleagues expressed amazement that bonds had been rallying for nearly a decade. Little did they know that the bond rally would last another two decades, pushing interest rates down from post-war highs of more than 10% to post-war lows currently near zero. Suffice it to say, bond yields can't go much lower, unless they move into negative territory.
[More from InvestingAnswers.com: Ask The Expert: Is A Shrinking Deficit Good For Stocks And Bonds?]
Simply put, demand for bonds will start to steadily weaken as interest rates start to rise.
Bonds and bond funds lose value as rates rise. Such losses are likely to wipe out any income bonds and funds may produce. Many investors will just step aside, cash out of their bond holdings and buy bonds again when it looks as if bond yields have stabilized at "normalized" rates. When will that be? It's hard to say.
Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen has talked of a very gradual shift in interest rates, and it may be four or five years before bond prices stabilize. Then again, if the U.S. economy grows at a faster pace in 2015, to around 3%, then the bond market may not show such patience.
[More from InvestingAnswers.com: How To Profit From The Rise Of The 'Millennials']
Recall that two decades ago, the long-term bond rally was interrupted by "bond vigilantes," who pushed the 10-year yield to 8.0%from 5.2% over the 13 months ended November 1994. That move was triggered by bond traders that came to fear that a slow rise in interest rates would lead to an unsustainable rise in federal debt service costs. As a reminder, our nation still carries a tremendous amount of debt on its books, even as the budget deficit has been shrinking. The backdrop between now and 1994 is somewhat similar.