- Billionaire bond king Jeffrey Gundlach believes the coronavirus sell-off is not over yet and markets may see more losses in April.
- The S&P 500 index collapsed into a bear market this quarter, while losing 12.52% in March at a record pace in an environment of unprecedented economic uncertainty due to the coronavirus pandemic.
- Meanwhile, Oaktree Capital's Howard Marks urged investors to be cautious in times of uncertainty such as this and added that his approach "is not black or white, buy or sell".
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Jeffrey Gundlach said in a webcast to investors on Tuesday that the market is acting "somewhat dysfunctionally" and that projections from banks that the U.S. economy will recover quickly were highly optimistic, Reuters reported.
The S&P 500 index collapsed into a bear market this quarter, while losing 12.52% in March at a record pace in an environment of unprecedented economic uncertainty due to the coronavirus pandemic. Its previous biggest monthly decline was in October 2008 with a 16.94% slide.
The webcast, meant to address investors on the economic impact of the coronavirus pandemic, was called "The Tale of Two Sinks" - an indistinct reference to the 2008 financial crisis and the current one.
The Wall Street bond king believes the March lows will be eclipsed in April when continued economic uncertainty could further rile investors. "I think we are going to get something that resembles that panicky feeling again during the month of April," Reuters reported Gundlach, a bond manager and co-founder of DoubleLine Capital told investors.
Gundlach believes that the market will get back to a better place, but it's "just not going to bounce back in a V-shape back to January of 2020," Reuters said.
Meanwhile, speaking to CNBC on Tuesday, billionaire investor and co-founder of Oaktree Capital Howard Marks also gave a negative outlook due to economic uncertainty but said investors can do some buying as "things have gotten cheap enough."
However, Marks urged investors to be cautious in times of uncertainty such as this and added that his approach "is not black or white, buy or sell".
Struggling companies, like the giants Boeing and ExxonMobil, have induced the drag of the Dow index. Major US stocks declined on Tuesday in the worst first quarter in history, with the Dow Jones having tumbled 23%.
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