Gundlach's base case is that interest rates will rise until they become untenable for the US Treasury (around 6% on the long bond). At that point, the government will be forced to intervene and control rates, causing a sudden, massive rally in long-term bonds.
Contrary to fears of a spike, a major rise in 10-year Treasury yields is unlikely. The current wide gap between long-term yields and the Fed's lower policy rate—a multi-year anomaly—makes these bonds increasingly attractive to buyers. This dynamic creates a natural ceiling on how high long-term rates can go.
The timeline for a US fiscal crisis has collapsed. What was once seen as a 20- or 40-year issue is now, according to Jeff Gundlach, a "five-year problem." Plausible scenarios show interest expense consuming over half of all tax receipts by 2030, making it an urgent, real-time issue.
Uncertainty around the 2026 Fed Chair nomination is influencing markets now. The perceived higher likelihood of dovish candidates keeps long-term policy expectations soft, putting upward pressure on the yield curve's slope independent of immediate economic data.
Jeff Gundlach notes a significant market anomaly: long-term interest rates have risen substantially since the Fed began its recent cutting cycle. Historically, Fed cuts have always led to lower long-term rates. This break in precedent suggests a fundamental regime change in the bond market.
The Fed plans to align its balance sheet duration with the Treasury's by reducing its holdings of long-term bonds. This would steepen the yield curve by raising long-term rates (hurting mega-caps) while simultaneously cutting the Fed Funds rate to ease pressure on smaller businesses with floating-rate debt.
A high-conviction view for 2026 is a material steepening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. This shift will not be driven by long-term rates, but by the two-year yield falling as markets more accurately price in future Federal Reserve rate cuts.
The Fed is prioritizing its labor market mandate over its inflation target. This "asymmetrically dovish" policy is expected to lead to stronger growth and higher inflation, biasing inflation expectations and long-end yields upward, causing the yield curve to steepen.
A new market dynamic has emerged where Fed rate cuts cause long-term bond yields to rise, breaking historical patterns. This anomaly is driven by investor concerns over fiscal imbalances and high national debt, meaning monetary easing no longer has its traditional effect on the back end of the yield curve.
Despite fears of fiscal dominance driving yields up, US bond yields have remained controlled. This suggests a "financial repression" scenario is winning, where the Treasury and Federal Reserve coordinate, perhaps through careful auction management, to keep borrowing costs contained and suppress long-term rates.
Citing the 1940s playbook, future administrations may force the Fed to fix interest rates at low levels. This makes government borrowing cheap, enabling massive spending to revitalize industry and defense, similar to how war efforts were financed.