Ray Dalio studied 500 years of history and says there are 5 cycles driving today’s markets with the same patterns repeating ‘like a movie’
Good morning. Leaders across sectors joined Fortune on Wednesday at the USA House in Davos, Switzerland, for a special series of conversations exploring the state of the U.S. economy, business innovation, and new frontiers for growth.
As an investor for more than 50 years, Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio told Fortune’s Kamal Ahmed that, after studying the rises and declines of reserve currencies in major empires over the last 500 years, he sees the same patterns repeating “like a movie.”
It all boils down to five specific forces that interact—money and debt, domestic politics, world order, nature, and technology, Dalio said. Every issue today sits within the interaction of these forces and their long-term cycles, he said.
When debt grows faster than income, governments face a choice between painful debt crises or printing money, which gradually erodes the existing monetary order, he explained. Over time, this leads to political conflict at home, as wealth and values gaps widen and faith in democratic institutions weakens.
At the same time, the post–World War II, U.S.-led, rules-based global order is breaking down because enforcement of “global rules” ultimately depends on the most powerful countries, which do not always comply, Dalio explained. “Who makes the rules, who enforces the rules, and how are you going to deal with that?” he asked.
On top of that, shocks from nature, such as pandemics and climate events, and waves of new technology disrupt economies and power structures.
“And certainly we’re having one of the greatest inventions, if not the greatest invention, when human intelligence is working with artificial intelligence,” Dalio said.
AI continues to be a top priority for leaders. To hear what executives, including Dara Khosrowshahi (CEO of Uber), Robin Vince (CEO of BNY), and Vas Narasimhan (CEO of Novartis) discussed with Fortune at the USA House, you can watch the full conversation in the video here.
Sheryl Estrada
sheryl.estrada@fortune.com
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com