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Home » Blog » Billionaire Ray Dalio: ‘I’m worried about something worse than a recession’
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Billionaire Ray Dalio: ‘I’m worried about something worse than a recession’

Matthew Harris
Matthew Harris
Published May 22, 2025
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Ray Dalio, Founder, Co-CIO and Chairman at Bridgewater Associates, at the Greenwich Economic Forum.

Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio said Sunday that he is worried that the turmoil resulting from President Donald Trump’s tariff and economic policies will threaten the global economy.

“Right now we are at a decision-making point and very close to a recession,” Dalio said on NBC News’ “Meet the Press.” “And I’m worried about something worse than a recession if this isn’t handled well.”

The hedge fund billionaire said he’s more concerned about trade disruptions, mounting U.S. debt, and emerging world powers bringing down the international economic and geopolitical structure that has been in place since the end of World War II.

“We are going from multilateralism, which is largely an American world order type of thing, to a unilateral world order in which there’s great conflict,” he said.

Dalio said five forces drive history: the economy, internal political conflict, the international order, technology, and acts of nature such as floods and pandemics. Trump’s tariffs have understandable goals, Dalio said, but they are being implemented in a “very disruptive” way that creates global conflict.

The president’s rapidly changing tariff policies have upended international trade. Trump on Wednesday announced a 90-day pause on his “reciprocal tariffs,” but he stood firm on 10% baseline duties and 145% tariffs on China.

Then, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced an exemption from the tariffs for Chinese-made consumer electronics like smartphones, computers and semiconductors late Friday, though the products remain subject to a 20% tariff imposed earlier in the year. But Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick backtracked on Sunday and said the exemption was not permanent.

In a Wednesday post on X, Dalio called for the U.S. to negotiate a “win-win” trade agreement with China that would appreciate the yuan against the dollar. He also called for both countries to address their growing debts.

“If they don’t, we’re going to have a supply-demand problem for debt at the same time as we have these other problems, and the results of that will be worse than a normal recession,” Dalio said.

The very value of money is at stake, Dalio said. A breakdown in the bond market, combined with events like internal and international conflict, could be an even more severe shock to the monetary system than President Richard Nixon’s cancellation of the gold standard in 1971 and the global financial crisis in 2008.

That change is avoidable, Dalio said, if lawmakers work together to trim the deficit and the U.S. discourages conflict and inefficient policy on the global stage.

 

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