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Jeffrey Gundlach (born October 30, 1959) is the founder of Doubleline Capital, an investment firm. He was formerly the head of the $9.3 billion TCW Total Return Bond Fund, where he finished in the top 2% of all funds invested in intermediate-term bonds for the 10 years that ended prior to his departure.〔 He was fired by TCW in 2009.〔("Bond Star Jeffrey Gundlach to Launch New Fund," ) ''Wall Street Journal'', July 29, 2011.〕 ''Barron's'' in a February 2011 cover story called him the "King of Bonds." He is a native of Amherst, New York〔Graham, Tim (July 8, 2014). (Sources: Jeffrey Gundlach exploring Bills purchase, approached Jim Kelly ). ''The Buffalo News''. Retrieved July 11, 2014.〕 and a graduate of Dartmouth College;〔("The King of Bonds," ), ''Barron's'', February 21, 2011〕 he went to Yale University for a Ph.D. in theoretical mathematics before dropping out. Jeffrey Gundlach founded Doubleline along with Philip Barach and 14 other members of Gundlach's senior staff from TCW.〔("Jeffrey Gundlach, Bond Savant," ) BusinessWeek, May 10, 2012〕 He was formerly co-manager of the $12 Billion TCW Total Return bond fund along with Philip Barach.〔 In 2012 he was included in the 50 Most Influential list of Bloomberg Markets Magazine. ==Home burglary and recovery of art== Gundlach's Santa Monica home was burgled in his absence in September 2012 and several pieces of art were taken along with some wine, five designer watches, cash and a prized〔Britt, Russ, ("Bond guru Gundlach bets big bucks to get his stolen art back" ), ''MarketWatch'', September 24, 2012. Retrieved 2012-09-25.〕 2010 red Porsche Carrera 4S.〔("Multimillionaire financier victim of $10-million heist" ), LA ''Times'', n.d. Includes a slide show of nine pieces of stolen art including the Mondrian (#7), the Johns (#6) and a Joseph Cornell (#8). Retrieved 2012-09-25.〕 Some days after the theft, Gundlach added to a $200,000 "overall" reward a $1 million reward for the Piet Mondrian painting amongst the missing and a $500,000 reward for the Jasper Johns. The total value of the stolen property was put at $10 million at the time.〔〔 Within weeks, a tip led to the recovery of the art works and arrests of suspects in the theft. The rewards—with the one for the Mondrian being termed a record for a single art work—were being said to have played a role in the recovery though no determination of payment had been made. The Porsche was still missing.〔Bel Bruno, Joe, and Stuart Pfeifer, ("Art stolen from Jeffrey Gundlach is recovered; 2 arrested" ), LA ''Times'', September 27, 2012. Retrieved 2012-10-02.〕 Gundlach allegedly solved the crime himself by informing the officers of a stolen painting with only emotional value of his grandmother (with an uncommon name), thieves were likely to Google that name to determine the value. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jeffrey Gundlach」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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