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Michael Hasenstab’s Global Bond Fund Loses Another $3 Billion

Total net assets in the Templeton Global Bond Fund fell from $30 billion to $26.9 billion in the three months through December.

Michael Hasenstab’s Global Bond Fund Loses Another $3 Billion
Michael Hasenstab, chief investment officer of Templeton Global Macro at Franklin Templeton Cos LLC, poses for a photograph following a Bloomberg Television interview at the Bloomberg Asean Business Summit in Bangkok, Thailand. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg *** Local Caption *** Michael Hasenstab)  

(Bloomberg) -- A global bond fund managed by star investor Michael Hasenstab saw assets drop by $3 billion for a second consecutive quarter, even after he backtracked on two loss-making investments.

Total net assets in the Templeton Global Bond Fund declined from $30 billion to $26.9 billion in the three months through December, according to public filings. Total holdings were down by a similar amount in the third quarter.

Michael Hasenstab’s Global Bond Fund Loses Another $3 Billion

The fund manager announced a move into haven currencies after two of his biggest investments flopped in August. A massive holding in Argentina was pummeled by the country’s default, and a short position in U.S. bonds was hit by the drop in bond yields.

Once a top-performing fund with assets well over double today’s value, Templeton’s flagship bond fund has also been diminished by the march of passive investments. It underperformed almost 90% of peers last year, returning 0.6% compared with a return of 6.9% for Treasuries.

Michael Hasenstab’s Global Bond Fund Loses Another $3 Billion

In a shift designed to offset loss-making positions, Hasenstab doubled exposure to the yen to more than 40% in the third quarter and added long positions in the Norwegian krone and Swedish krona. He said he expects the yen to appreciate against the dollar as monetary-policy divergence narrows between the Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan. He also increased liquidity by boosting cash across his funds.

The fund is holding on to its Treasury short, but Hasenstab said last year he is turning the focus to longer maturities. He has argued for years that markets are overvaluing long bonds given rising deficit spending and rising debt.

Average duration in the fund, a measure of sensitivity to shifts in rates, increased to minus 1.01 years as of the end of December, the filings show. At the end of June it was a record low of minus 2.82 years.

A spokesman for Franklin Templeton didn’t immediately comment when contacted by Bloomberg.

To contact the reporter on this story: Natasha Doff in Moscow at ndoff@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Gregory L. White at gwhite64@bloomberg.net, Cecile Gutscher, Sid Verma

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Opinion
Michael Hasenstab Kept Bet Against Treasuries as They Surged