Billionaire “Bond King” Jeffrey Gundlach says strong headline GDP numbers are obscuring growing stress beneath the surface of the US economy.
Speaking in a new CNBC interview, the DoubleLine Capital founder warns that headline growth is being driven by narrow pockets of activity, while large parts of the population face very different economic realities.
Gundlach says recent GDP strength is concentrated in two areas: AI-driven business investment and high-end consumer spending, creating a widening gap between aggregate data and lived experience.
“We look at GDP, and it looks great. But it’s pockets that are doing that. It’s a lot of business investment with AI buildouts and the like. And it’s a lot of high-end consumer spending. I like to admonish investment analysts to say, don’t always just look at aggregated data. Because as the economy gets so much more bifurcated and new technologies catch people’s imagination and have a lot of CapEx investment, that doesn’t mean that just because on average things are doing well, there’s a huge dispersion as you go quartile by quartile or quintile by quintile, decile by decile in people’s actual circumstances.”
The Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta estimates the real US GDP growth for Q4 of 2025 stands at 5.4%.
According to Gundlach, the divergence between headline economic numbers and the everyday American experience will ultimately trigger government intervention.
“And so I think we’re getting closer and closer to that moment where intervention becomes more of a choice on the menu of government policies.”
Gundlach outlines a scenario in which policymakers attempt to push long-term rates lower to ease pressure across the economy, a move that could trigger sharp market reactions.
“Will they try to get those rates down to stimulate the affordability of housing, maybe lower the interest expense on the debt? And what would that mean? Well, what it would mean is potentially a very violent rally in the long-term part of the Treasury bond market.”
He adds that signs of strain have been accumulating beneath the surface for years.
“It’s becoming more and more of an issue that something funny is going to happen with government finances and the financing of the bond market. And we’ve seen tells on this building up over the past five years.”
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