Ray Dalio on Economic Trends, Investing, and Making Decisions Amid Uncertainty
Ray Dalio highlights debt dynamics, geopolitical friction, and the rise of gold as central banks shift reserves amid a breakdown of the post-WWII monetary order.
- Recently, Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, spoke to Harvard Business Review marking Bridgewater's 50th year and said his long historical study guides his investing and leadership approach.
- Debt dynamics, he warned, force central banks to print money or raise rates, with many G7 and developed countries approaching the limit of their 38 trillion national debt.
- Dalio said his firm built culture around radical truthfulness and radical transparency with idea-meritocratic decision making using believability-weighted decision making, causing about 30% turnover within two and a half years.
- On AI, Dalio cautioned it will be the main war issue and warned AI will concentrate gains among the top 1% or 10% while replacing jobs for the bottom 60%.
- Dalio warned that midterm elections likely favor Democrats gaining the House, and wealth taxes could force asset sales as paper wealth must convert to money.
14 Articles
14 Articles
Hedge fund legend Ray Dalio warns of a historic upheaval. While the US is sinking into debt, the transition from trade to capital war threatens. Stop financing Washington's deficits, the monetary world order is shaken. He sees above all a way out.
Ray Dalio warns the global rules-based order is already 'gone' as Trump threatens Greenland: 'Let's not be naive'
The Bridgewater founder told Fortune he pays attention to the last 500 years. "It's like a movie for me. It's like watching the same movie happen."
The founder of Bridgewater believes that the rules of the game are changing again as far as the monetary order is concerned and he has shared what his strategy would be before a new scenario
Billionaire Ray Dalio Warns Global Monetary Order Breaking Down As Central Banks Diversify Into Gold – The Daily Hodl
Billionaire investing icon Ray Dalio says the global monetary order is suddenly experiencing a major shift. In a new CNBC interview, Dalio says central banks are moving away from holding fiat currencies as a reliable store of value. “The monetary order is breaking down. What I mean by the monetary order is that fiat currencies and...
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