Jeff Gundlach
David Rosenberg - "Let's Get Real - Risks Are Looming Big Time"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2012 20:29 -0500Earlier, you heard it from Jeff Gundlach, whom one can not accuse (at least not yet) of sleeping on his laurels and/or being a broken watch, who told his listeners to "reduce risk right now" especially in the frenzied momo stocks. Now, it is David Rosenberg's turn who tries to refute the presiding transitory dogma that 'things are ok" and that a Greek default will be contained (no, it won't be, and if nobody remembers what happened in 2008, here is a reminder of everything one needs to know ahead of the "controlled", whatever that is, Greek default). Alas, it will be to no avail, as one of the dominant features of the lemming herd is that it will gladly believe the grandest of delusions well past the ledge. On the other hand, they don't call it the pain trade for nothing.
Complete Jeff Gundlach "Fall Of The [BLANK] Empire" Slideshow
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2012 18:15 -0500Your listened the call, now enjoy the Gundlach slides in the leisure of your own unrehypothecated concrete bunker, 50 feet below sea level.
Jeff Gundlach Live Webcast On "The Decline And Fall Of The Roman Empire"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2012 16:19 -0500
While the star of multibillionaire Bill Gross may or may not be fading (the jury is still out on what the final outcome will be for the man who so far alone among his peers has dared to point out the lunacy in the Fed's actions), that of his far smaller and nimbler peer Jeff Gundlach of DoubleLine Capital has been rising rapidly, and at last check has his fund's AUMs at over $25 billion, a doubling in a few short months. Gundlach is conducting his periodic webcast live at 4:15pm Eastern (i.e., now) at the link below. Anyone can join in. And by the title of the presentaiton, it promises to be quite interesting. Click on the following Link for webcast or the image below.
The defining soundbite from the call Q&A: Regarding Bank of America - "It is wise to avoid banks. Not surprised BAC has gone up - just like NFLX - just like Italian bonds. Reduce risk right now, including, Bank of America."
Jeff Gundlach Complete Slideshow Presentation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 17:51 -0500DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach, who has managed to double the AUM of his new firm in a few short months following an admirable return in 2011, and at last check had over $22 billion, as usual has put together a rather impressive slidedeck of raw data for his just completed investor call, which the chart porn addicts will salivate over for hours courtesy of the plethora of items covered: from Europe, to the US economy, to all financial products. Of particular note is slide 26 which shows the complete breakdown of the US bond market - it is curious that recently Treasurys became the biggest asset class on a relative basis, greater than both MBS and Corporate. The implication here is that the Fed, courtesy of being the largest single holder of Treasurys, now in effect is the marginal price setter of the largest US security.
"To Have And Have Not" - Complete Jeff Gundlach Presentation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2011 17:44 -0500
Earlier today, DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach's held another of his comprehensive overview webcasts, which unfortunately we missed due to the excitement in the Senate Ag Committee where Duffy "let one slip", however for the benefit of our readers we wanted to share the complete 72 page presentation as it covers diverse and critical topics in every aspect of the domestic and global economy.
Join Jeff Gundlach In A Discussion Of Whether "Risky Assets Are Cheap Enough"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/11/2011 12:13 -0500Today, at 1:15pm Pacific Time (4:15 EDT), the head of DoubleLine Funds, Jeff Gundlach will hold an open discussion and webcast on the question of whether risky assets are cheap enough. Among the headline topics will be what the most efficient portfolio allocation for the current market going forward is (for those who missed the efficient frontier including real assets, gold appears to have been the best performer over the September 2008-September 2011 with a comfortable margin especially over equities, period much to the chagrin of various naysayers).Anyone can join the webcast at the following link; phone lines will also be made available at (877) 407-1869 or for international calls (201) 689-8044. Full webcast presentation of the webcast presented below.
Jury Finds DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach Breached Fiduciary Duty To TCW
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/16/2011 10:54 -0500Just out from Bloomberg:
- Jeffrey Gundlach Found Liable for Breach of Fiduciary Duty
- TCW wins trade secret claim against Gundlach
- TCW wins no punitive damages against Jeffrey Gundlach
Well, that's over and done with. At least a jury did not find him to be a worse bond investor than Bill Gross...
Jeff Gundlach: "Now What?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/12/2011 15:50 -0500
DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach has released his latest presentation on the economy and the markets, titled, cryptically enough, "Now What?" Zero Hedge readers can access it below. For those who wish to hear Gundlach cover the key topics live, can do so in real time here (registration required) as he is currently holding a Q&A on the key topics presented.
What Will Rally Bonds After QE2? Nothing Short Of A Double Dip, According To Jeff Gundlach
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 13:51 -0500And continuing with the rates discussion from the prior post, next up we have that "other" bond manager, DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach, chiming in on what would cause a treasury rally following QE2. His assessment: nothing short of a confirmed double dip, or "zero GDP growth." Dow Jones reports: "Over the past two months, government bond market participants have fiercely debated whether the end of the Fed's $600 billion in Treasury bond purchases in June will trigger a market sell-off or rally...the U.S. government bonds' rally in recent weeks shows investors have already bet the Fed's exit from the market will boost safe-harbor Treasurys because the economy will slow. So any gains will be limited. "The 10-year Treasury yield has hit the moment of truth," Gundlach said in an interview with Dow Jones." Needless to say, 0% growth, which is already in the cards according to a simple correlation analysis between Y/Y GDP growth and initial jobless claims, will force the Fed, in the absence of another fiscal stimulus (which everyone knows is not coming from DC this year and possibly next year either), to step up double time and to launch far more easing to offset the economic weakness which we have been predicting for 6 months, and which the recent Japanese earthquake, and Chinese slowdown, merely accentuated. The only wildcard continues to be Japan, which many have expected would take up the monetary slack and issue tens of trillions in yen in QE, yet which has so far been slow to come, leaving the ball in either the US or European court. However, with the ECB in transition as JCT wishes to cement his hawkish legacy, the only real alternative continues to be the Fed. Oddly enough, stocks today appear to have started to already price in the start of QE3. When this sentiments shifts to precious metals and crude, our advice would be to hide you kids, and hide your wife...
"Deja Vu All Over Again" - Jeff Gundlach's Latest Set Of Contrarian Observations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2011 18:05 -0500As usual, Jeff Gundlach provides one of the best, most comprehensive overviews of the economy with a fixed income/rates emphasis. 97 pages of pure facts as the voiceover was given during the earlier webcast, allowing the reader come to their own set of conclusions.
Jeff Gundlach's Latest Economic Outlook - Redux
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2011 12:24 -0500Now that Jeff Gundlach is out there making big residual waves (with Barron's as usual just 3-6 months behind the curve), here is, once again for those who missed it the first time around, Gundlach's latest presentation. The next update from Gundlach will be on March 15. We will present it to readers as soon as it hits.
Jeff Gundlach's December Presentation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/17/2010 13:17 -0500... in which a familiar chart appears on page 8.
And Now For The Other Side: Jeff Gundlach Expects The Foreclosure Moratorium To Have Negligible Impact On MBS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/14/2010 16:40 -0500By now the apocalypse scenario for MBS has been made all too clear: there is a possibility that quite soon all MBS securities may be found worthless due to technicalities, as assignments of securities without due underwritier diligence (there is a reason why underwriter counsel exists in the first place) could easily render the entire stack worthless (the same goes for CMBS) and puttable to the issuer. Yet one person who believes that the fraudclosure's impact on MBS will be "negligible" is DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach. While we wish we could share's Jeff enthusiasm, we are concerned that his entire argument is premised on the assumption that if an autopilot has worked so far, it is certain to work for the (un)foreseeable future: "The Great Unknown notwithstanding, the risk du jour should come as no great surprise. Since the advent of the credit crisis, a number of states have made fitful attempts at foreclosure moratoria. Even more obvious, a growing part of the mortgage sector has entered quasi-moratorium since 2007. For years, remittance data have shown thebuilding of overhang of non-payers relative to the tardy liquidation of delinquent loans. So tell us something new." While from a technical standpoint Gundlach (whose livelihood depends on the ongoing stability in the multi-trillion MBS arena) is spot on, never before has the very core of the judicial process been not only questioned, but found to be replete with fraud. Which is why now, for the first time, there is a political element. And Jeff knows all too well, that politics is what happens (and impacts the ROI) when one is busy putting together DCF's. Should this scandal continue to escalate to the very top, as it seems set on doing, we would be far less sanguine about the optimistic outlook for the MBS space.
Jeff Gundlach "Society Looked Into The Debt Abyss And Decided Enough Is Enough With The Debt-Based Consumer Economy"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2010 16:19 -0500Jeff Gundlach who has been spot on with timing his calls for Treasury inflection points, did a quick Q&A with Morningstar summarizing his outlook on the economy. In a nutshell while the DoubleLine manager is still skeptical that inflation may strike, he is convinced deflation is pervasive. To wit: "markets and the economy to date have offered scant evidence to support
the inflation case. Stocks are down over the past 10 years. Real estate
is down hard over the last five years. Commodities are down sharply over
the last two years. Instead of spiking to double digits, bond yields
are hugging the ground. M3, which is now calculated only by private
economists, is down nicely over the past year. And of course money
velocity is moribund: Society has looked into the debt abyss and decided
enough is enough with the debt-based consumer economy. So, deflationary
forces still prevail. What could shift the balance of forces in favor
of inflation? A well-meaning movement to cut the deficit has at long
last arrived, maybe. But cutting the deficit that is supporting the
consumer economy will directly depress gross domestic product. If that
causes not just a look but a step or two into the deflationary abyss,
then maybe the inflation case will move to center stage." Sure, let's not forget the collapse in the shadow economy. But let's also not forget that the economy is in a vacuum, and were the Fed not in the picture, we would totally agree. But because the most irrational human being in the world is in charge of said world via his control of the US reserve currency (and irrational because he promotes exclusively policies that benefit the vast minority over the majority), we will have to disagree. And so would the price of gold.
Jeff Gundlach Strategy Outlook Webcast Tomorrow At 4:15 PM Eastern
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2010 16:34 -0500DoubleLine's Jeff Gundlach will hold a webcast discussing the performance of his new DoubleLine Core and Total Return Funds (which as we pointed out recently had presciently started selling bonds ahead of the recent move lower), but more importantly will share his general outlook on the market. As this is the man who a few months ago warned that the US will likely end up defaulting (and very much correctly, contrary to those drinking the perpetual monetization Kool Aid, believing in the ultimate power of the Fed, which will be the last buyer long after all other marginal buyers of US debt are long gone), this webcast will be a very informative and interesting one. DoubleLine has opened up the webcast to readers of Zero Hedge. Mark your calendars - details inside.




