I found out today that Morningstar has downgraded SLADX to neutral. It used to be bronze.
They removed rating from MetWest total return a while ago due to turnover of managers. Two managers are retiring this year and next (not 100% sure about dates). They still have not restored the rating.
Berkowitz will be on Wealthtrack next week. After being quiet for a very long time, it seems that he is back in the headlines a little bit. There was an article on FAIRX in Barron's this week. In the sign of the times, there were no comments on the article. Hopefully, Consuelo will ask him the following:
- Who is on his team now? Fernandez and the people that replace him have all left. Of course Pitkowsky and Trauner left when Fernandez got promoted to co-manager. Info about his team is absent from Fairholme site. A long time ago they were listed.
- What has Bruce learned from Sears and Fannie Mae preferred mistakes? I noticed that he trimmed the preferred position lately. I am assuming that all the lawsuits against US gov are all done and failed. Not sure if imperial metal is going to pan out.
- He seems to buy and sell quickly now (Intel, Commercial metal,...)?
- Not sure who the shareholder that are left are? Lots of money in FAIRX is his and his family money.
- Now that Joe is 80% of portfolio there is no downside protection as he used to carry a lot of cash in the past
So it looks like Hasenstab will be fired from running GIM. Saba is taking over. He was a darling in the 2000s and since 2010 has been terrible. At some point TPINX had a LOT of $ under management. Now it is a $4.4 bil fund. Morningstar has it rated neutral
Not sure how much QE, 0% interest rates, and rise of ETFs has contributed/magnified underperformance of active managers vs. indexes. Most active managers run mutual funds although that is changing a little bit.
I own all four funds.
Comments
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4636244-saba-takes-over-gim
He started managing Templeton Global Income (GIM) on 02/28/2002.
The two funds generated excellent returns for years.
Mr. Hasenstab was subsequently named M* 2010 Fixed-Income Manager of the Year.
However, Hasenstab's funds have underperformed for a long time after he lost his mojo.
I owned GIM for several years but exited long ago.
There is a 2022 MFO thread regarding GIM and Saba Capital Management.
Link
M* categorized GIM as an EM bond fund from at least 2013 until 2018.
From 2019 through 2021 M* placed the fund in the nontraditional bond category.
Since 2022 GIM has been categorized as a global bond fund.
Hasenstab's management style was contrarian.
During the eurozone crisis in 2011, he swooped in and purchased
dollar-denominated Ukranian bonds, Irish bonds and Hungarian debt.
Hasenstab also made currency bets - I recall short yen/euro positions.
Twitter LINK
https://www.cefconnect.com/fund/GIM
Edit/Add. https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20231106482750/en/
In 2021, Saba followed a similar strategy to takeover Voya PPR and turn it into a different hybrid fund BRW. A recent report for BRW shows mix of investments in stocks, bonds, CEFs, cryptos. GIM/SABA will probably do the same on a bigger scale (it’s 4x BRW); for now, the current ER will be maintained but may go up later.
Another unexpected CEF development occurred in 2020 when Franklin Templeton/Franklin/BEN bought Legg Mason whose subsidiary was Western Asset Mgmt. Western had many bond CEFs and this change in control triggered the renewals of all Western CEFs’ advisory contracts. Saba and other CEF activists took advantage of this by buying positions in several Western ETFs that they wanted to target.