New York, Jan 12: DoubleLine Capital LP, the $53 billion firm run by star bond 
investor Jeffrey Gundlach, said it is now managing stock portfolios in a new 
division called DoubleLine Equity LP.
The firm, which surpassed $50 
billion in bond assets last year after launching in 2009, said in a news release 
that it has tapped former TCW Group Inc portfolio managers Brendt Stallings and 
Husam Nazer to expand its stock division.
In an interview, Gundlach, 
DoubleLine's chief executive officer and chief investment officer, said stock 
mutual fund strategies suffer from a lack of new ideas.
"We think the 
equity business is ripe for creative thinking," he said.
Gundlach said he 
plans to start with one or two mutual funds that offer a strategy focusing on 
U.S. stocks, and quickly follow with a hedge fund whose strategy would focus on 
"best ideas" in international stock investing.
"We're really not prepared 
to do a lot of individual stock selection outside of the United States," he 
said.
Gundlach had hinted at the firm's move into stocks in a webcast on 
September 11, citing the broad disinterest in equities and their potential as a 
hedge against inflation.
He said that some of the stock funds he plans to 
offer will have a strategy that focuses on specific sectors among small and 
mid-cap stocks, while others will have a broader strategy that could vary widely 
in its stock selection.
Gundlach said DoubleLine's business plan had been 
to build the firm's bond management side to between $50 billion and $60 billion 
in assets before diversifying into areas such as stocks, a goal it has 
achieved.
"This is our first move to diversify. There's very likely to be 
one if not two more over the course of 2013," Gundlach said. He said he is 
seeking to reach a maximum of about $10 billion in assets within DoubleLine's 
equity division.
Gundlach has made pointed calls on stocks in the past, 
including one at the Ira Sohn investing conference in May to buy natural gas 
while betting on a decline in the shares of Apple Inc, the world's most valuable 
technology company.
Gundlach recommended trading the volatility in 
Apple's stock price.
"Apple's flopping around like a fish in a boat. When 
it has a big rally, you should probably sell it. When it goes down a lot, you 
should probably buy it," he said, and reiterated a call he on CNBC in November 
that its stock price may drop to $425 a share. Apple's stock was up 3.2 percent 
to $549.03 at the close of trading.
DoubleLine Total Return Bond Fund, 
the firm's flagship, earned a return of 9.2 percent in 2012, beating 97 percent 
of other U.S. mortgage-focused funds, according to Lipper. The fund, which 
oversees $37.1 billion, took in $19.7 billion last year, making it the most 
popular mutual fund by asset growth.
Pacific Investment Management Co, 
the world's largest bond fund manager with $1.92 trillion in assets as of 
September 30, 2012, began moving into equities when it launched its first 
actively managed stock mutual fund in 2010.
Gundlach said that his foray 
into stock investing could also come with a downturn in the stock market, which 
he said he could overcome through active management.
"There's a really 
good argument that you could have a major correction in the S&P 500 in 
2013," he said. He cited the heavy influence of U.S. policymakers on 
markets.
Stallings and Nazer were previously group managing directors at 
TCW, the highest title for managers at the firm, where they oversaw $5 billion 
in assets in stock portfolios.
Gundlach founded DoubleLine after a nasty 
split with TCW, where he was fired as chief investment officer in December 2009. 
The two sued one another in 2010, but settled in December of that year without 
disclosing terms.
Private equity firm Carlyle Group struck a deal in 
August to buy a 60 percent stake in TCW from French bank Societe Generale. TCW 
management and employees will own the remaining 40 percent stake in the Los 
Angeles-based investment firm, which has $135 billion in 
assets.
DoubleLine, which is also based in Los Angeles, employs more than 
80 people. Stallings and Nazer plan to hire at least five investment 
professionals this year, the news release said.
Nazer said in an 
interview that dividend-paying stocks in general and consumer staple stocks are 
particular bright spots.
Ends
SA/EN
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DoubleLine launches stock management division
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