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Bill Gross Says He Made $10 Million Betting Against GameStop

(Bloomberg) — It wasn’t just retail traders who cashed in big during the GameStop Corp. stock mania. A legendary billionaire investor made a minor killing shorting the shares.

Bill Gross, the erstwhile bond king and co-founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., said in an interview Tuesday on Bloomberg Television that he made about $10 million betting against the video game retailer’s shares.

But the trade didn’t go off without a hitch.

“I got in too early,” said Gross. “I was in the hole by about $10 million.” But he stuck with it to sell at a profit.

GameStop stock, for months among the most heavily shorted on the New York Stock Exchange, surged more than 1,700% from Jan. 1 through Jan. 27 as a legion of Reddit users piled on, forcing bearish traders to scramble for shares and brokers to take the highly unusual step of curbing trading.

Amid that mania, Gross took a shot to bet against the shares: “I got in with options like a good Robinhood trader, I guess.”

He’s not done yet.

“I’m still selling call options at $250 and $300,” said Gross. “I think this is the perfect opportunity for options sellers, not buyers, to take advantage.”

Gross was largely known for his bond bets after four decades at Pimco, which he built into one of the world’s largest asset managers. For years he generated industry-leading returns as manager of the Pimco Total Return Fund and in 2013 the firm’s assets approached $2 trillion. He was ousted though a year later after feuding with his Pimco partners over strategy, succession and managerial control.

Gross then joined Janus Henderson Group Plc as a money manager, switching his focus from pursuing relative return against a benchmark to an unconstrained strategy. The aim was to achieve positive results no matter the market conditions, but it didn’t work out. Returns were disappointing and Gross retired in March 2019.

Gross continues to comment on central bank policy and deficits and speculate in the bond markets. He told Bloomberg Television he’s short the 10-year future and betting against the long bond “to a certain extent.”

(Updates with Gross bond investments in last paragraph)

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