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DoubleLine's Jeffrey Gundlach: Powell knows there's upside risk to inflation
CNBC Televisionยท2025-06-18 20:03

Inflation Outlook - The Fed acknowledges upside risks to inflation, with base effects likely to worsen inflation numbers in upcoming meetings and potentially by year-end [3][4][5] - Crude oil price increases of $10, representing a 20% rise, could add approximately 04 percentage points to the headline CPI if sustained [5][6] - Tariffs are viewed as inflationary by Powell, potentially leading to margin compression and lowered earnings estimates [6][7] - The bond market anticipates the Fed will cut rates even if inflation remains above 3% between now and year-end [9] Monetary Policy & Employment - The Fed's dual mandate faces increasing tensions, potentially requiring a choice between fighting rising unemployment and fighting rising inflation [7] - The market believes the Fed is more likely to prioritize addressing rising unemployment over fighting inflation, even if inflation is moderately above 3% [8][14] - No discussion of rate hikes suggests a consensus within the Fed that the next move in rates will be lower [14] Recession Indicators - A one-year moving average of the twos 10's yield curve turning positive has historically preceded recessions and is currently above its 12-month moving average [9] - The U3 unemployment rate crossing above its three-year moving average has historically signaled the front end of a recession, which has already occurred but is not yet accelerating [10] - Rising continuing claims foreshadow a potential increase in the U3 unemployment rate [11][12] Market Dynamics - The bond market is signaling expectations of rate cuts through a steepening yield curve, with long rates rising more substantially than short-term rates [8][9] - The yield curve steepening is a trend that is expected to continue, with the Fed likely to keep pressure lower on short-term interest rates [13]