Gundlach: The Federal Reserve simply cannot cut interest rates; the inflation market is not cooperating
According to Jin Shi's report, DoubleLine Capital CEO Gundlach stated that investors will not see interest rate cuts at the next Federal Reserve policy meeting. He pointed out that although the market had anticipated two rate cuts this year, the inflation market is simply not cooperating. Gundlach mentioned that when the two-year U.S. Treasury yield is nearly 50 basis points higher than the federal funds rate, it is impossible to implement rate cuts. He also stated that Kevin Walsh, who has just been confirmed as the Federal Reserve Chairman, is taking office during a "difficult time" and predicted that the first digit of the next CPI index will be in the "4 range."
You may also like
Do you want to buy CRCL?
Wosh: Inflation has cooled in recent weeks, AI is reshaping the economy, and forward guidance has lost its necessity
The most secretive AI winner
Looking at Stripe's ambitions and the future of stablecoins from OUSD
From Pump.fun to Collector Crypt: Has Solana's income throne changed hands?
Dan Bin's latest speech: Don't miss out on a great era
Robinhood launches its own blockchain, no longer wanting to be a tenant on others' chains
Why Tokenized Stocks Are Booming in 2026 While Crypto Is Still Struggling
Former ByteDance employee's account: How I started with two Pinduoduo hard drives and made six times the profit with Seagate to achieve financial freedom?
MiCA reshuffle begins, Binance temporarily bids farewell to the EU
How does Gate redo "buying and selling stocks" from the cryptocurrency world to the stock market?
Visa and Mastercard join 140 giants to launch a new stablecoin, but the impact on the market landscape may still be limited
Circle CEO responds to OUSD's challenge: Stablecoins are a winner-takes-all business, and we will not slow down
Argentina vs Cape Verde: When a Record-Breaking Legend Meets an Unbreakable Underdog
WEEX exclusive pre-match analysis of Argentina vs Cape Verde, exploring Messi-led Argentina’s dominance and Cape Verde’s historic defensive breakout, with a breakdown of volatility, structure, and match dynamics.
