Ray Dalio Segment on Bloomberg TV (Notes)

Notes from Ray Dalio on Bloomberg TV: Bridgewater’s Ray Dalio on Economy, Investing, Success

  • Productivity is the relationship between earnings & spending
  • Short term debt cycle: spend more than earn (payback = spend less)

Monetary Policy Options

  • Policy 1: High debt, low interest rates = no more monetary policy
  • Policy 2: quantitative easing: assets rise in price, lowering expected returns
  • Proposed Policy 3: Put money directly in the hands of spenders (Execution: fiscal or monetary (fiscal deficits (central bank lending)), helicopter money)

Current environment: Pushing on a String (re: Monetary Policy); When monetary policy cannot entice consumers into spending more money or investing in an economy, even if monetary policy is loosened to to put more money into peoples’ hands.

Macro

  • Japan: high debt, low interest, massive quantitative easing; inflation is not working
  • Europe: interest rates 0, slightly negative; purchases of assets = currency movements
  • USA: close to 0 interest rates; spreads are low (2% bond yield, 4% expected return on equity)

Expected Returns

  • Cash: 0%
  • Bond: 2%
  • Equities: 4%

China Options

  • Scenario is similar to the recent scenarios in US, then Europe, now China (debt rising faster than income)
  • Will need to restructure debt, restructure economy (manufacturing – services – digital), balance of payments / flows
  • Mentioned China is like one person having a “heart attack”; will become weakened in the long term but likely unaffected long term

Other China Problems

  • Balance of payments: money is leaving country
  • Bond market was just opened to foreign investment

Investor Environment

  • Low returns
  • 0 interest rates
  • Slow growth
  • Volatile environment (including currency volatility)
  • Temporality

o   2008 = debt crisis

o   2016 = relative stagnation, low returns

Volatility: increases risk premias and liquidity

Negative feedback loop: sotcks go down, wealth effect decreases

Rise in value of dollar and decline in stock = tightening monetary policy