The American King of Bond, Jeffrey Gundlach, on Economic Growth and Dollar (24 AUG 2021)
DoubleLine Capital Founder & CEO, Jeffrey Gundlach, sat down with Yahoo Finance's Julie LaRoche on 24 Aug. for a some interview discussing the outlook for the US Dollar, the economic recovery, currencies, and Fed expectations... among other things.
As usual, the new bond king was not shy of expressing his strong opinions, warning that:
"We're running our economy in a way that is almost like we're not interested in maintaining global reserve currency status."
Gundlach noted that in the aftermath of the pandemic, the strongest economy "by far" has been China, not the US.
"China's made no secret of the fact that they want to be a global player and have at least a seat at the table of global reserve currency status," he said, adding that China has "made no secret of the fact that they want their military to be dominant, maybe the biggest in the world."
Combine this with the fact that the US is "growing debt like crazy," and it's clear the dollar is headed towards losing its reserve currency status, Gundlach said.
"And so as long as we continue to run these policies, and we're running them more and more aggressively -- we're not pulling back on them in any way -- we are looking at a roadmap that is clearly headed towards the US dollar losing its sole reserve currency status."
The US GDP is 70% consumption. And as the economy has rebounded back on a GDP basis, it's done so with tremendous increase in the trade deficit. Multiple percentage points of GDP have come from an increase in the trade deficit. And that's not real GDP. Consumption is not really the economy. The economy is about production. And when the US import goods produced in Asia with stimulus money, it shows up as the US GDP, but it's really Asian GDP. It is simply a consumption in the United States.
So the US economy isn't really that strong, as pointed out, with five million fewer jobs. It shows up as, correctly mathematically, in the productivity equation, but it's really Chinese productivity, because, again, if you just consume goods, you're not really having economic growth. You're just having consumption, but the US define it as economic growth.
Watch the interview here:
DoubleLine Capital Founder & CEO, Jeffrey Gundlach, sat down with Yahoo Finance's Julie LaRoche on 24 Aug. for a some interview discussing the outlook for the US Dollar, the economic recovery, currencies, and Fed expectations... among other things.
As usual, the new bond king was not shy of expressing his strong opinions, warning that:
"We're running our economy in a way that is almost like we're not interested in maintaining global reserve currency status."
Gundlach noted that in the aftermath of the pandemic, the strongest economy "by far" has been China, not the US.
"China's made no secret of the fact that they want to be a global player and have at least a seat at the table of global reserve currency status," he said, adding that China has "made no secret of the fact that they want their military to be dominant, maybe the biggest in the world."
Combine this with the fact that the US is "growing debt like crazy," and it's clear the dollar is headed towards losing its reserve currency status, Gundlach said.
"And so as long as we continue to run these policies, and we're running them more and more aggressively -- we're not pulling back on them in any way -- we are looking at a roadmap that is clearly headed towards the US dollar losing its sole reserve currency status."
The US GDP is 70% consumption. And as the economy has rebounded back on a GDP basis, it's done so with tremendous increase in the trade deficit. Multiple percentage points of GDP have come from an increase in the trade deficit. And that's not real GDP. Consumption is not really the economy. The economy is about production. And when the US import goods produced in Asia with stimulus money, it shows up as the US GDP, but it's really Asian GDP. It is simply a consumption in the United States.
So the US economy isn't really that strong, as pointed out, with five million fewer jobs. It shows up as, correctly mathematically, in the productivity equation, but it's really Chinese productivity, because, again, if you just consume goods, you're not really having economic growth. You're just having consumption, but the US define it as economic growth.
Watch the interview here: