@donkeychan491

This was one of Gundlach's best ever interviews - mainly because he was given the chance to expound his views at length rather than being interrupted every 5 seconds.

@babakmammadov7421

Thank you, Mr. Gundlach!!! The best interview I’ve listened in years.

@manning8

Great job Bloomberg. I rarely have the opportunity to give you a thumbs up but this is one of those times.

@SnideCommentator

Great talk

@brennus01

Mr Gundlach, thankyou for your thoughts.

@marisabenson1222

At last there's some intelligent and realistic analysis.

@DaveBo270

Learning math needs to be seen as more patriotic than driving around with a flag in the back of a pickup truck

@gunsumwong3948

Trump isn't interested in the national debt problem.  His big and beautiful bill is going to add a couple of trillion more.
Trump had national debt of just $20 trillion when he last took office first time.  It has been on average $2 trillion deficit annually to today's $36.97trillion which is expected to beach $37 trillion limit before the month ends or $38 trillion before the year end.

@user-zz8lb6bd7p

10:20 this is really a good point, short sellers get burden because they can see it early and think everyone else can as well...

@sandeepc9335

Wow!! 
Only if all interviews could be like this.

@anongirder

I can listen to gundlach all day

@EuroHoody

No one ever mentions taxes; reinstate the pre-Trump tax rates (not a hike), trim defense spending and corporate handouts, and that could change the trajectory without touching SS, Medicare or Medicaid and other government expense items

@flyingtiger2212

such an informative discussion with Gundlach...he has exceptionally keen insights into financial markets...the biggest takeaway: things take a long time to "arrive"...such a time lag to actually see hard effects of say tariffs or foreign investment divestiture or our national debt...based upon his observations and analysis, it seems as tho things are setting up for something more like 2007/2008 than a brief april 2025 blip...thanks Bloomberg and thanks Jeff!!!!

@SamMiller-x4f

Wimpy: I will gladly pay you for a cheeseburger on Thursday for a cheeseburger today πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

@evelynramos445

Thank you

@raycarlson8027

Market behavior seems to be acting now...dollar index is dropping as are bond markets. We might not have to wait until 2027 or 2028 to see notice taken. Great interview! Thank you for airing this.

@prafullokhande1071

Man, I thought I knew the rules: work hard, hustle, save every cent. But I always felt stuck. Then someone casually mentioned Nixorus books in a comment somewhere, and I swearβ€”it felt like accidentally stumbling onto forbidden knowledge. It made me question every single thing I'd been taught about money, wealth, and success. Not gonna lie, I felt like I was cheating the system just by reading it.

@rchen404

Love the cockroach Harvard/college endowment analogy. Gundlach is truly a modern day poet!

@jbond5834

this time is strange, and alarming. that is true

@randyharmon717

This must be hard to deliver to the public even though most have felt a reckoning is coming no one wanted to confirm there suspicions. These tariffs might be the rock that wrecks the economy too much disruptions while a number of military conflicts are occurring around the world and little confidence in the current administration. Cash is king you don’t pay fees for using cash but other sources you’ve got a processing fee. The bottom line is who collapses first it might be a domino effect eventually the world bank considers all countries are bankrupt and a new financial system is implemented.