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Sep 14, 2022 65 tweets 8 min read Read on X
DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach presents "Rehab."

Tune in Thursday, 9/15/2022 at 1:15 pm PT | 4:15 pm ET.

#macro #markets #commodities #Fed #inflation #growth #rates #stocks #bonds #EM #Europe #USD #FOMC #Powell #recession Image
.@DLineCap CEO Jeffrey Gundlach: I think the U.S. needs to go into rehab
Gundlach: There are 1,250 IRS agents who are not paying taxes. 87,00 new IRS agents coming.
Gundlach: Most Americans think the country is on the wrong track
Jeffrey Gundlach: 21% think America's on the right direction. That's the same percentage of people who believe Elvis is alive and living on Mars.
Gundlach: One problem is tremendous disagreement in many parts of the political system
Gundlach: The budget deficit continues to be a big driver of the economy.
Gundlach: look at student loan to income ratios, 31% in 2007. 54% most recent level.
Jeffrey Gundlach: The stimulus has slowed down from 2020, tremendous jump in excess savings. Suddenly households are drawing down. the negative savings is due to inflation.
Gundlach: Wal-Mart reports rise in the use of credit cards for groceries. This is a very alarming problem with revolving credit going up.

We need the economy to get off this credit-debt binge.
Gundlach: Delinquency rates rising on consumer loans. These trends look pretty powerful. looks like this began a year ago.
Gundlach: 2-year Treasury pushing toward 4%.
Gundlach: Stocks no longer undervalued versus bonds
Gundlach: We're not really in a recession now. Not quite there.
Gundlach: Gas prices up substantially.
Gundlach: The leading economic indicators now 0.0% YoY.
Jeffrey Gundlach: odds of a recession in 2023 are pretty high
Gundlach: The unemployment rate is a pretty good indicator of the front end of of a recession.
Gundlach: Moving average at 4.07 of unemployment. In a few months, the actual rate could undercut the moving average. That's a recessionary signal.
Gundlach: Free money from the country doesn't make the country richer. It downgrades the standard of living of almost everyone except for the those in power.
Gundlach: Consumer sentiment is in freefall.
Jeffrey Gundlach: consumer durable spending is way above trend due to crazy stimulus.
Gundlach: Nondurable also above trend.

All of that above trendline spending will be reversed.
Gundlach: so there's no apparent area of pent-up consumer demand to help the economy going forward
Gundlach: monthly mortgage payments 2 years ago was $1,000 median. Now $1,816 with a doubling of mortgage rates.
Jeffrey Gundlach: I've been saying for a long time that the Fed does nothing but follows the 2-year Treasury yield. Now they are catching up the Fed Funds rate to that level. Unfortunately, looks like the Fed might overtighten.
Gundlach: As in the last hiking cycle in 2018, the 2-year Treasury will be higher than the ultimately terminal Fed Funds rate.
Gundlach: The bond market prices in a peak 4.4% fed funds in 2023, but I think the Fed Funds will not go that high.
Gundlach: The Fed is getting aggressive to the point that they oversteer the economy into the dumpster
Gundlach: I am negative on the dollar when the next recession comes. In the meantime, the dollar is going up.
Jeffrey Gundlach: We're like the unfortunate Amy Winehouse, the U.S. won't go to rehab.
Gundlach: Export and import prices are not adjusted. More of a real measure of inflation. Coming down, but still way above CPI.
Gundlach: job switchers hanging in with the CPI, not so much job stayers.
Gundlach: CPI understates inflation in the cost of housing.
Gundlach: Commodities have been correcting, flirting around the 200-day moving average, probably not headed much lower.
Gundlach: Gold uninteresting right now. Not negative on gold though.
Gundlach: Bloomberg Aggregate Bond Index at 4.25%. The rise in yields has been painful for bond investors.
Gundlach: But thanks to the rise in yields, plenty of bonds at discounts. It's very easy to put together a low-risk bond portfolio that yields at 8%. an opportunistic portfolio can be put together to yield 12%.
.@DLineCap CEO Jeffrey Gundlach: Opportunities more exciting in the bond market than at any time in the last 10 years.
Gundlach: Aggregate yield has been a pretty good predictor of forward returns over the next 3 years.
Gundlach: Copper-gold ratio has been declining.

Says fair value for 10-year treasury is 2%.
Gundlach: I'm favorable on long term Treasuries. Allows you to own credit.
Gundlach: U.S. real yields have moved up a lot. This is a big problem for valuations of stocks.
Gundlach: Some people are predicting no earning growth next year. My opinion is earnings will probably slow down. With real yields going up, that's a double wammy.
Gundlach: Bear market in stocks is probably not over.
Gundlach: The Nasdaq 100 stopped outperforming two years ago.
Gundlach: S&P 500 will probably be better investment than the Nasdaq for years to come.
Gundlach: MSCI Europe seems to be outperforming the S&P 500
Jeffrey Gundlach: When the next recession comes, I'm strongly of the mind that EM stocks will outperform the S&P 500, but we need to wait for the recession and for the dollar to weaken.
Gundlach: This year has been the worst year for the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond index return by a mile.
Gundlach: The liquidity in the Treasury market is terrible. Investors should pay attention to this.
Gundlach: Strangely, high yield has outperformed investment grade, notwithstanding the negative stocks. IG underperforming HY due to duration.
Gundlach: Opportunities in the bond market to earn capital gain returns as well as income.
Gundlach: Uptick in the bank loan default rate. I'm not predicting a huge problem, but looks like we're at the beginning of increases in default rates.
Gundlach: Mortgage-backed securities duration has widened out a lot, at the point of the maximum extension.
Gundlach: Agency mortgage spreads today went to a 10-year high. So they are looking attractive.
Gundlach: Quantitative tightening is just getting started. The Fed's balance sheet has hardly dropped at all.
Gundlach: Double-barreled QT at the end 2018 shocked the stock market, forced the Fed to reverse course.
Gundlach: I think the Fed will probably raise the fed funds to 4%, the two-year Treasury is almost there.

The Fed might tighten above that.
Gundlach: In the aftermath of COVID, my suspicion is the Fed really wanted to push the CPI to 4%.
Jeffrey Gundlach: Where did it go to? 9%.

Overshot by 500 basis points.
Gundlach: Economist consensus and the bond market both think the CPI slope will be even steeper on the way back down to 2% and stay there exactly.

That's ridiculous.
Gundlach: Who is to say they don't overshoot on the downside? It's possible that they produce deflation.
Gundlach: Believe you want to own Treasuries with credit to cover a deflationary scenario.
Gundlach concludes: Thank you for your support and bye for now.

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More from @DLineCap

Mar 12
DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach presents "Cave People" today at 1:15pm PT.

To watch live, register on .

Stay tuned here for updates.

#macro #bonds #stocks #Fed #FOMC #rates #inflation #recession #debt doubleline.com
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Jeffrey Gundlach starts his webcast "Cave People" in reference to Plato's cave metaphor.
Gundlach: People are becoming more removed from reality.
Read 40 tweets
Jan 5
Just Markets 2024

DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach discusses the economy, the markets and his outlook for what he believes may be the best investment strategies and sector allocations for 2024.

Tuesday Jan. 9, 2024, 1:15 pm PT.

Register here: event.webcasts.com/starthere.jsp?…Image
DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach: Outside the commodity and currencies complexes, assets ended up positive, across stock and bond markets, of the latter especially in credit.
Mr. Gundlach: The big winners were in the high yield bond market.

The dollar ended down on the year.

The commodities that did well were gold and copper.
Read 69 tweets
Jun 13, 2023
In the latest installment of this monthly series, Product Specialists Phil Gioia, CFA and Sam Nussbaum discuss the Agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) market.

Taking focus in this episode: the sector's attractive relative value brought about by widening spreads relative to Treasuries. Based on a favorable outlook, the DoubleLine team has been increasing exposure to Agency MBS across portfolios.
Agency MBS current coupon spread, which is the spread for a par-priced bond over Treasuries, is near the widest level since the GFC.

Current levels have historically represented an attractive entry point, as spreads rarely remain elevated at these levels for prolonged periods.

Watch here:
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As of June 1, nearly 50% of Agency pass-throughs have been sold from the FDIC’s portfolio and just over 35% of the entire Agency portfolio. At the current pace, sales could be finalized in a few months, instead of the 7 to 10 months that the original guidance suggested. Image
Read 7 tweets
Jun 9, 2023
In webcast “Dust in the Crevices,” Jeffrey Gundlach shares his macro and market views and makes the case for an imminent dust-up, “in the next few years,” in Washington’s decades-long use of debt finance to skirt hard fiscal decisions.

#macro #markets #Fed #inflation #rates
“Here we are in an economy that is supposedly growing, and yet we have 7.3% budget deficit as a % of GDP,” DoubleLine CEO and founder Jeffrey Gundlach says.

That figure is probably headed much higher, especially if the U.S. enters recession. Image
In the wake of hikes of 525 bps in the fed funds rate and 400 bps along many parts of the Treasury curve, DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach notes the burden of federal debt service has surged higher in dollar terms and as a percentage of GDP.

Watch: Image
Read 28 tweets
Jun 6, 2023
Jeffrey Gundlach: These are reasons why perhaps bond yields have stopped going up.

10-year Treasury can't even get up to 3.90 these days.
Gundlach: My favorite inflation measures: export and important prices because they are not altered with hedonics.

These prices have certainly come down -- in fact in deflationary mode.
DoubleLine's Gundlach: Bonds are much more attractive and their inflationary nemesis has been in retreat.
Read 31 tweets
Jun 6, 2023
DoubleLine CEO Jeffrey Gundlach presents Total Return webcast "Dust in the Crevices" today at 1:15pm PT.

Stay tuned here for more.

#markets #macro #bonds Image
Jeffrey Gundlach: There is dust in the crevices of our financial institutions.

The debt ceiling has been raised 99 times since it started in 1913.

This method of getting along is getting pretty dusty.
Gundlach: U.S. Federal Budget Balance as a percentage of GDP on a rolling 1-year basis: We've been in a trend toward worse and worse budget deficits as a percentage of GDP.
Read 38 tweets

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