Ray Dalio isn’t mincing words on the economy; his signal’s hitting on the back of an economic brew few can ignore.
Gold just zoomed past $3,500/oz., while the 10-year yield flirts with 4.25%, and net interest costs have already cracked the $1.01 trillion mark in 2025.
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Inflation is cooling, but it remains sticky (core CPI at 3.1%, PCE at 2.6%), while the Fed faces a credibility test with a market pricing in a 60% chance for a rate cut in September.
With this in mind, Dalio’s fresh take points to classic late-cycle stress, where there’s debt, distrust, and dangerous policy overreach.
The risk isn’t just economic, it’s also political, which muddies the waters.
Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio drops a bold economic call, and Wall Street is listening.
Image source: Dipasupil/Getty Images
Who is billionaire Ray Dalio?
Ray Dalio is the founder of Bridgewater Associates and one of the most influential voices in the global macro investing scene.
His net worth sits near a whopping $14 billion, per Forbes. Moreover, despite Bridgewater scaling back in 2024, it still raked in $92.1 billion as of Q2 2025, with a 13F equity book at roughly $24.8 billion.
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Dalio’s unique approach to investing involves weighing multiple factors, including interest rates and inflation, and then building strategies based on those patterns.
His All Weather strategy is about building balanced portfolios where no single investment can throw it all off.
Another approach is Pure Alpha, where he hunts for smart opportunities in stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities that don’t move together.
For instance, at Davos in 2020, his viral “cash is trash” remark warned that real yields were too low in holding idle capital.
Also, by 2022, as inflation raged on, he flipped the script and said that “cash is no longer trash.”
Ray Dalio warns Trump’s America is sliding toward 1930s-style autocracy
Ray Dalio just sounded the alarm on the U.S. economy and how markets are entering perilous territory under President Donald Trump.
Dalio said that the U.S. is up against a toxic cocktail of widening “gaps in wealth,” plummeting trust, and state-led economic moves that remind him of pre-World War II authoritarian regimes.
Key takeaways:
- Dalio compared the current U.S. political climate to the 1930s-40s rise of autocratic leadership.
- He commented that President Trump’s intervention in Intel and the Fed reflects a “desire to take control of the financial and economic situation.”
- He remarks that a weak Fed could “undermine the confidence in the value of money,” pushing investors out of Treasuries into gold.
- Dalio also warned that the U.S. is heading toward a “debt-induced heart attack” within three years.
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The Bridgewater Associates founder also said that Washington’s $7 trillion in annual spending versus $5 trillion in revenue is remarkably unsustainable. “The demand for debt will unlikely keep up with the supply.”
In his opinion, that leaves the Fed with just a couple of uncomfortable options, which include allowing rates to soar and potentially risk default, or printing money and pulverizing the dollar.
Bridgewater leans into AI, trims China bets in Q2
Bridgewater Associates’ latest 13F filing shows a clear slant toward Big Tech and AI, while dialing back exposure to China.
The fund’s portfolio value jumped to a whopping $24.79 billion in Q2, up from $21.6 billion in the previous quarter, including 585 disclosed positions.
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Its top 10 holdings currently make up about 36% of assets, spearded by SPY, IVV, Nvidia, IEMG, and Google.
Bridgewater Associates’ additions and upsizing:
- New stake: Arm Holdings ($76.6 million).
- Bigger positions: Nvidia (more than double quarter-over-quarter); loaded up more on Google, Microsoft, Broadcom, and Palo Alto Networks.
- Theme: a clear exposure to AI and Big Tech with ETFs providing stability.
Bridgewater Associates’ trims and exits:
- Sold or trimmed: Alibaba, Baidu, JD.com, Nio, Li Auto.
- Turnover was near 33%: 85 new buys, 164 exits, and 287 reductions.
- Signal: A shift away from weaker China macro toward U.S. technology.
The one-line takeaway is that Bridgewater is betting on bigger AI bets, lower China risk, and ETFs as ballast, indicating a classic macro hedge fund recalibration.