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    Home»Markets & Investments»Billionaire ‘Bond King’ Jeffrey Gundlach Unveils ‘Shocking Development,’ With Microsoft Debt Now Trading Safer Than US Treasuries

    Billionaire ‘Bond King’ Jeffrey Gundlach Unveils ‘Shocking Development,’ With Microsoft Debt Now Trading Safer Than US Treasuries

    By Henry KanapiNovember 11, 20252 Mins Read
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    Billionaire Jeffrey Gundlach says he’s seeing a shocking turn of events as investors are now treating select corporate debt as more secure than US government bonds.

    In a new discussion with Barclays CEO C.S. Venkatakrishnan, the DoubleLine Capital CEO says credit markets are repeating a dynamic last seen in the early 1980s, when IBM’s bonds briefly yielded less than Treasuries — a sign of higher perceived safety.

    “The spreads on investment grade corporate bonds are basically at the tightest of all time, other than back in the early 80s… when we had a shocking development that IBM bonds traded through treasuries. Well, that’s happening now again. Microsoft is trading through Treasuries.”

    In 1981, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield surged to roughly 15.8%, the highest level in modern history, as the Federal Reserve under Paul Volcker hiked rates aggressively to crush runaway inflation.

    But this time around, Gundlach says Microsoft appears to offer a safer investment option than US Treasuries because of its superior balance-sheet discipline versus the US government’s rapid debt buildup and short-term funding bias.

    “I think that’s not random. I think that’s because people realize that the corporate public market doesn’t face a maturity wall. The CFOs did a much better job than the US government in managing their debt burden.”

    Gundlach points to the Treasury Department’s heavy reliance on short-term bonds during the low-rate era, noting the federal government failed to lock in cheap funding for the long haul.

    “When rates were low, we were running 84% T-bill issuance. You should be locking in lower rates for longer.”

    By contrast, large corporations extended maturities and fortified balance sheets, a dynamic now highlighted as mega-cap technology firms tap bond markets to fund the artificial intelligence buildout. US companies have issued roughly $200 billion in bonds so far this year, led by Meta, Alphabet and Oracle.

    Disclaimer: Opinions expressed at CapitalAI Daily are not investment advice. Investors should do their own due diligence before making any decisions involving securities, cryptocurrencies, or digital assets. Your transfers and trades are at your own risk, and any losses you may incur are your responsibility. CapitalAI Daily does not recommend the buying or selling of any assets, nor is CapitalAI Daily an investment advisor. See our Editorial Standards and Terms of Use.

    Billionaire Bond King Jeffrey Gundlach Microsoft Treasuries
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