Gundlach's remarks come the day before U.S. Federal Reserve officials are
widely expected to leave short-term interest rates unchanged following a
dismal May jobs report.
"The Fed is confused and their confusion spills into investor psychology,"
said Gundlach, who oversees more than $100 billion at Los Angeles-based
DoubleLine.
"The Fed changes its tone so frequently, it seems every other week the
message is different. They’ve turned into the 'Zombie Fed.' They say the
meeting this week is 'live,' but investors all know it isn't at all."
Gundlach said it is a "dangerous price appreciation game" to purchase German
Bunds at current levels and that gold and gold miners are still an
attractive place to put money to work.
On a webcast for investors later on Tuesday he said negative interest rates
implemented by some major central banks, notably in Japan, were backfiring.
"Negative interest rates don't do what they're theoretically supposed to
do," he said, noting the appreciation in the Japanese yen.
He added that negative interest rates "aren't leading to higher economic
growth." He said world gross domestic product could be averaging around just
1 percent against the backdrop of aggressive global monetary policies.
Gundlach also noted the dramatic "drawdowns" from the highs in several stock
markets. Germany is down 22 percent, Japan is down 23 percent, China is down
45 percent, the United Kingdom market is down 15 percent and France is down
20 percent.
"Negative rates do not prop up stock markets," Gundlach said on the webcast.
http://www.newsmax.com/Finance/StreetTalk/jeffrey-gundlach-central-banks-investors-control/2016/06/14/id/733861
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