Former Federal Reserve chairman Ben S. Bernanke is joining Pacific Investment Management Co. as a senior adviser, his second consulting agreement with a top money manager in as many weeks.
Mr. Bernanke will contribute his economic expertise to the firm's investment process, the firm said Wednesday. Mr. Bernanke spoke at Pimco's client conference in March and advised on the last two of its quarterly economic forums that
guide investment strategy.
“We think our clients expect this of us — we've had a long history of attracting top-notch talent and contributors,” group chief investment officer Daniel Ivascyn said in an interview. “Obviously his experience within central banking is important at the moment, given where we may be in terms of the U.S. economic cycle, but we're looking for and excited about his ability to make broad-based contributions to our strategy.”
At Pimco, which suffered record redemptions following the departure last year of co-founder Bill Gross, Mr. Bernanke will also engage with clients. The 61-year-old, who led the U.S. central bank during the deepest economic downturn since the Great Depression,
earlier this month joined Citadel, the hedge fund run by Chicago billionaire Kenneth Griffin, to advise on monetary policy, financial markets and the global economy.
BERNANKE'S LEGACY
The money managers are turning to the former Fed chairman as they try to navigate the end of more than six years of near-zero interest rates and unconventional monetary policies that Mr. Bernanke oversaw before he left last year.
“I am delighted to work together with Pimco's strong team of investment professionals and contribute to its investment process in my role as an adviser to the firm,” Mr. Bernanke said in a statement.
Pimco, which oversee $1.59 trillion and still runs the world's biggest bond mutual fund, is seeking to reassure clients and fortify its ranks after the departures of its co-chief investment officers, Mr. Gross and Mohamed El-Erian, last year. It hired Joachim Fels, former chief economist at Morgan Stanley, as global economic adviser; Gene Sperling, a former economic adviser to two U.S. presidents; and Nobel laureate Michael Spence as consultants on economic policy.
Alan Greenspan, who retired in 2006 after 18 years as the head of the U.S. central bank, later signed on as consultant to Pimco.