Billionaire investor Jeff Gundlach warns of a recession as markets roil: 'Buckle up'
- It's time to start worrying about a recession in the US, according to Jeff Gundlach.
- Soaring bond yields signal that a downturn is coming, the DoubleLine Capital founder said.
Bond-market turmoil could be a sign that a recession is on the way, Jeff Gundlach has warned.
The DoubleLine Capital founder said Tuesday that a severe economic downturn is becoming more likely, pointing to the narrowing spread between 2-year and 10-year US Treasury yields.
"The US Treasury yield curve is de-inverting very rapidly," Gundlach wrote in a post on X.
That "should put everyone on recession warning, not just recession watch," he added. "If the unemployment rate ticks up just a couple of tenths it will be recession alert. Buckle up."
Longer-term bond yields have spiked in recent weeks, with investors ramping up bets that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates high for much of 2024 in a bid to crush inflation.
That's led to the gap in returns offered by 2- and 10-year Treasurys narrowing to just 33 basis points, for the tightest yield curve since late March.
The yield curve being inverted – as it has been for the past 226 trading sessions – has been a harbinger of every US recession since 1969, according to data from the London School of Economics.
The curve tends to de-invert just before a recession actually strikes.
Gundlach isn't the only voice on Wall Street warning that the rapid bond-market sell-off is stoking economic turmoil.
On Monday, JPMorgan Asset Management's David Lebovitz said that the risk of a "financial accident" is increasing as fixed-income yields spike – and predicted the Fed will eventually have to slash interest rates to prevent stock-market chaos.