Hedge fund kingpin Ray Dalio is seeing a case for
gold as central banks get more aggressive with
policies that devalue currencies and are about to cause a
“paradigm shift” in investing.
Ray Dalio Theory Of Paradigm Shift - BUY GOLD
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Dalio, founder of the world’s largest hedge fund,
wrote in a LinkedIn
post that investors have been pushed into
stocks and other assets that have equity-like returns. As a
result, too many people are holding these types of
securities and likely to face diminishing returns.
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I think these are unlikely to be
good real returning investments and that those that will
most likely do best will be those that do well when the
value of money is being depreciated and domestic
and international conflicts are significant, such as gold,
the Bridgewater Associates leader said.
Wall Street Daily
Additionally, for reasons I will explain in the near future,
most investors are underweighted in such assets,
meaning that if they just wanted to have a better balanced
portfolio to reduce risk, they would have more of this sort
of asset. For this reason, I believe that it would be both
risk-reducing and return-enhancing to consider adding gold
to one’s portfolio. I will soon send out an explanation of
why I believe that gold is an effective portfolio
diversifier.
The price of gold jumped
higher amid Dalio’s publishing of the post, most recently up
0.7% around $1,421 an ounce.
Dalios call comes two weeks before the Federal Reserve is
expected to cut its benchmark interest rate by at least a
quarter point. That move comes after a three-year cycle of
raising rates from the historically accommodative near-zero
levels implemented during the financial crisis.
The fresh trends are part of what he labeled a new
paradigm shift that comes after the last one during the
crisis. Investors, Dalio said, are going to need to change
their mindset about what will work after the longest bull
market run in Wall Street history.
In paradigm shifts, most people get caught
overextended doing something overly popular and
get really hurt, he wrote. On the other
hand, if you’re astute enough to understand these shifts,
you can navigate them well or at least protect yourself
against them.
Since the crisis, the Fed and many of its global
counterparts have been holding interest rates low and using
policies like quantitative easing, or the purchase of bonds
and other financial assets, to boost risk-taking which in
turn has helped holders of financial assets.
During that time, the amount of corporate and government
debt has surged, putting central banks in the position of
needing to keep interest rates low. The Fed embarked
on a program where it tried to normalize policy, but now is
expected to shift back into easing mode as it cuts
rates and halts the reduction of the bond holdings on its
balance sheet.
To me, it seems obvious that [central banks] have to
help the debtors relative to the creditors. At the
same time, it appears to me that the forces of easing behind
this paradigm (i.e., interest rate cuts and quantitative
easing) will have diminishing effects, Dalio wrote.
For these reasons, I believe that monetizations of debt and
currency depreciations will eventually pick up, which will
reduce the value of money and real returns for creditors and
test how far creditors will let central banks go in
providing negative real returns before moving into other
assets.
Dalio added that he is uncertain of the timing for
the shift but he thinks it is approaching and will have a
big effect on what the next paradigm will look like.
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