Gundlach explicitly stated that gold is back down to about what he thought would be the target high point for the year, and at this level, "it's a very good opportunity to add to gold." After surging to nearly $5500 last year—exceeding his prediction of above $4000—gold has corrected to a more reasonable valuation based on his original target, creating an attractive entry point. LONG because he sees current prices as a compelling opportunity to increase exposure, indicating conviction in future upside potential. A sustained downturn in commodities or shift in macroeconomic conditions that reduces gold's appeal as a safe-haven asset.
Calls private credit an "unmitigated disaster" and "only going to get worse," drawing a direct parallel to subprime mortgages in 2006. The market is opaque, marks are not real (citing an example of the same position marked at 95 vs. 8), and has a fundamental mismatch between private assets and offered liquidity. There is no incremental buyer, only sellers, and redemption requests will surge. A major shakeup is inevitable. Defaults will lead to significant repricing and highlight the incestuous, unhealthy relationship with private equity. A stronger-than-expected economy could delay defaults and allow for a more orderly unwind, mitigating systemic damage.
Recommends American investors have 100% of their equity exposure outside the US, with his "number one recommendation" being emerging market equities in local currencies. US equities are extraordinarily overvalued (price-to-book more than double ex-US), while foreign investments have started to outperform in real time. He believes we are in the early innings of a multi-year period of foreign outperformance. Significant valuation divergence and the regime shift (falling dollar, rising US yields) favor non-US equities, particularly EM in local currencies. A severe global recession could hit emerging markets harder than the US, reversing relative performance.
States we are in a secular shift where long-term Treasury yields will rise, especially in the next recession, breaking the 40-year pattern. Calls the fiscal path "completely untenable" and says higher yields are the "path of least resistance." $2 trillion annual deficits are compounding, and bonds rolling off at ~3.8% will be refinanced at higher rates (4-5%), exploding interest expense. This will force a market-imposed stop, leading to higher yields. Higher yields mean lower prices for long-duration Treasury bonds. He holds near-zero exposure and has swapped to the lowest-coupon bonds to mitigate restructuring risk. A severe economic downturn could trigger a flight-to-quality bid for Treasuries, temporarily lowering yields against his thesis.