Conversations with Tyler - Ray Dalio on Investing, Management, and the Changing World Order

Episode Date: December 15, 2021

Want to support the show? Visit donate.mercatus.org/podcasts When Ray Dalio was 23, President Nixon announced that the United States would no longer be adhering to the gold standard for American curr...ency. Clerking on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, Dalio expected to see chaos—but instead stocks soared. Curious to understand this phenomenon, he began to read about similar events in 1933, and it opened his eyes to the lessons that could be drawn from history. His latest book draws on the patterns he's gleaned from studying dynasties and empires throughout time, as well as his own experiences as a hedge fund manager and founder of Bridgewater Associates. Ray joined Tyler to discuss the forces that will affect American life in the coming decades, why we should be skeptical of the saliency of current equities prices, the market as a poker game, the benefits and risks of the US dollar as the world reserve currency, why he thinks US inflation will not be transitory, the key to his success as an investor, how studying the Great Depression enabled him to anticipate the 2008 financial crisis, Bridgewater's culture of radical transparency, the usefulness of psychometric profiles, where the United States is falling short most in terms of moral character, his truth-seeking process, the kinds of education crucial to building a successful dynasty or empire—and what causes them to fail, how transcendental meditation helps him be creative and objective, what he loves about jazz music, what we undervalue about the ocean, why he loves bow-hunting Cape Buffalo, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded November 5th, 2021 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Ray on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. 

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:03 Hi everyone. This is Dallas, producer of Conversations with Tyler. We've reached the end of another great year of episodes, and I hope you've enjoyed listening to and learning from them as much as I have. Conversations with Tyler is just one of the many things I do here at Mercatus, and it's without a doubt one of my favorite aspects about my job. If you've enjoyed this podcast or have benefited from it in any way, please consider making a financial contribution this holiday season before the end of the year at donate.mercadis.org slash podcasts. That's donate.org slash podcasts.
Starting point is 00:00:41 Any donation you submit will go towards the production of the show, including new episodes released every other Wednesday, live shows and more in-person interviews when it's safe to hold them again, free and open transcripts of every episode enhanced with helpful links, and all the books and resources Tyler needs to prepare for these interviews. Additionally, any donation of 75% of, $25 or more, or any monthly donation of $5 or more, will receive a copy of stubborn attachments signed by Tyler himself and some sweet conversations with Tyler Swag while supplies last.
Starting point is 00:01:15 So don't wait. The show's motto is listening produces knowledge, and if you have learned anything new, became excited about a new topic, or had any ideas challenged from listening to this podcast, please support the show at donate.mercadus.org slash podcasts. We really appreciate your support and can't wait for you to hear what we have in store for 2022. And with that, here's this week's conversation between Tyler and Ray Dalio. Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real world problems.
Starting point is 00:01:54 Learn more at Mercatus.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversations with Tyler.com. Today I am here with Ray Dalio, who needs no introduction. Most notably, Ray has a new book out, Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order, why nations succeed and fail. Ray, welcome.
Starting point is 00:02:21 Thank you. Thank you for having me. The very first sentence of the introduction in your book is this. The times ahead will be radically different from those we've experienced in our lifetimes, though similar to many times in history. Unquote. Do we see this today in current market prices? And if so, which ones?
Starting point is 00:02:40 We certainly see it today in market prices and in everything that's happening. So there are three, sometimes maybe we could stretch that to five, big things that are happening, and they are reflected in market prices and the dynamics behind them and their change will be reflected in changes in market prices. Those three big ones are first, that which is happening with money, and credit, in other words, when you get close to zero interest rates, and you spend a lot more money than you earn, then the government does that. That means that a lot of money is printed, and it moves its way through the system in a way that is reflected in market prices. And so that is what
Starting point is 00:03:34 is happening now. The second is the very large internal conflicts that we're having that are due to wealth gaps, political gaps, and so on, that influence the left and the right and the dynamic between them. That affects tax policies, that affects capital flows and the like, and they're reflected in market prices and will change as those circumstances change. And the third big influence is the rise of a great power, China, to challenge the existing leading power and the existing world order. And that is being reflected in market prices, but will be reflected more as those circumstances change. So those are the three big influence. to answer your questions that are reflected, maybe not yet adequately, and we have to look ahead
Starting point is 00:04:37 of what things will change. The other two that have been reflected through history, and I didn't have a full appreciation of until I studied the last 500 years of history. Those two are technology and inventiveness changes. We're accelerating the rate at which they are occurring, and that adaptability and change is affecting our lives in big ways. So you cannot ignore the technologically and inventiveness changes. And the fifth are acts of nature. You know, the one thing that was interesting to me when I studied the last 500 years of history is that acts of nature and they could be climate-related, droughts and floods and pandemics,
Starting point is 00:05:24 had cost more lives and toppled more civilizations than anything else, including wars. So they are something that comes along irregularly. You know, when you have the pandemic or the drought or that event that comes along once in 100 years or so, they have had big effects too. So pandemic is a reminder of those. But those are the drivers, and they will remain the main drivers, and as they change, prices will continue to change. But if I look today, say, at equities prices, they seem fine. If I look at the 10-year yield for the U.S., it's not crazy high, should I just assume that these matters are more or less going to work out fine, given those market prices, or are those prices wrong?
Starting point is 00:06:17 No, I think you have to look at the dynamic behind those prices, and I think I would look at them a bit differently. Regarding the dynamic behind those prices, it is that we are spending more than we are earning by a lot, individuals and the country as a whole, and that we need money, partially because of the political issues, partially for all the reasons that you know. So a lot of debt is being created that is also producing the need for a lot of money. And as a result of that, we have very negative real interest rates. Real interest rates of short-term interest rates are significantly negative. And even bond yields, real bond yields, are over 100 basis points negative.
Starting point is 00:07:11 And so when one looks at the return of owning those bonds, that is a very bad return. It means that if you save in those assets and you put it away, that you will lose buying power at probably a rate of three to five percent per year. We can guess what inflation is and we can talk about that. But you will lose that and that tax on your buying power. one will not want to be saving in those assets. It makes one want to borrow in those assets and the available of credit and that set of circumstances drives money into other assets and those assets are investment assets as well as goods and services.
Starting point is 00:08:03 And so what we see now is that stocks are not expensive, not very, expensive, maybe a little bit more so than normal, relative to bonds, which are very expensive, but still not expensive in relation to cash. And so they are all having expected returns that are comparatively low, and we have an inflationary period. So it's very important to understand the paradigm that we're in and how that dynamic works. And so as the inflation pressures become an issue, and we have relatively, let's say, stronger growth, those things will start to change. And so the big question that the markets look at is how will that change as a result? Will the Federal Reserve and untrue central banks begin to tighten monetary policy?
Starting point is 00:09:00 Because these things will change. And what will tax policies be and the like? And those things will affect market prices going forward. It's unsustainable. Help me put this in the context of finance theory. If I look at the literature on finance, it's very hard to predict excess returns. We're not even sure beta predicts excess returns. Firm size may be a little. Price to book value, maybe a little.
Starting point is 00:09:26 Are you suggesting that the factors you're citing predict excess returns? If so, why don't we find that in the research literature? If not, why do we think they have predictive power? Do they predict excess returns? polarization, credit, rise of China. They don't seem to in finance papers. You know, there's so many people who write finance papers, and then there are people who make money in the markets.
Starting point is 00:09:50 I can't speak for those who are writing the finance papers, but I can't answer your question in terms of the predictive value of those things. Okay, so as we deal with the mechanics of debt or excess returns, there's always throughout history a debtor, and a creditor. And there's always throughout history the ability to create demand by creating debt and by creating money. And then there become clear preferences for doing one or the other. There are environments like the late 1970s when Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker tightened money and wanted to make it good to save.
Starting point is 00:10:38 and bad to borrow and have credit, that set of circumstances was caused, and that action was caused by things that happened before it, and that produced high real interest rates and the like, and that produced the environment that we had, largely the disinflationary environment that followed. Similarly, the 1960s led to the 1970s. The 60s had too much debt creation due to war, and Vietnam and what we call guns and butters policies that were spending more than we were earning. And that led to the necessity in 1971 for the Federal Reserve, for the President of the United States, to acknowledge that they would no longer be able to pay the dollar claims in gold and to default on the gold claim and to devalue the exchange rate and to devalue the
Starting point is 00:11:38 dollar, which led to the 1970s, inflation and so on. So there are always, all through history, the dynamic in which there are high real interest rates and it pays to be a saver for sometimes. And there are times when there are very, very low real interest rates and the need to create a lot of money and credit. And it pays to have assets, the opposite side of assets positioned in the opposite way. And that's been true throughout history. And that's the main driver. So I think when we look forward, we can use those as guides to what's likely to happen in the way of excess return. It's in fact, the way the system works. In other words, investors, borrowers and lenders, look at the relative expected returns of cash, bonds, and other asset classes, and move their money.
Starting point is 00:12:38 between those things based on the relative pricing. And that's why, for example, when there is a rise in interest rates, a tightening of monetary policy, and short-term interest rates rise relative to short, longer-term interest rates, so the yield curve begins to flatten and so on, that we see that there's a slowing in the economy and a slowing in capital availability lending, long-term lending. There's a shift to, saving and as a result there's a slowing of the economy. That's to me how the system works. If I look at the macroeconomic literature, it seems to me even GDP when we run statistical tests, it's hard to distinguish that from a random walk with trend. So there's not a lot of obvious mean reversion in the system. I think we're referring to different things. You're referring to what you're
Starting point is 00:13:32 reading in the literature. Sure. And I'm referring to my 50 years of experience and what I'm doing, and so we have a different perspective about those things. But tell me what's wrong with the literature. Well, I think I just... Those are actual numbers taken from government databases. You run statistics on them. Returns are close to a random walk. GDP is close to a random walk with trend.
Starting point is 00:13:55 It's not random at all. In other words, do you think where interest rates are is random? Do you think that if these things change, let's take that example. Do you think that it would be random that the Federal Reserve would tighten monetary policy? Do you think it's random that we're having inflation pressures? Do you think those things are random? I think the market has a model of what will happen. It's hard to beat that model.
Starting point is 00:14:24 But look at it this way. The factors you're citing to me, they're publicly available information, right? We're talking about them on a podcast. Why shouldn't they already be in market prices? The market is like a poker game. I've played the poker game for over 50 years, and I'm saying it's a zero-sum game relative to what's priced in, and the smart people take money away from those who are less smart. And that's the way it works. I wouldn't be in the business. I wouldn't be on your podcast, I presume, unless that was true. Well, it's one thing to think some people are smarter than others, but if they're smarter than others with respect to the ability to just spot publicly available information, it seems that's easy to copy.
Starting point is 00:15:06 We should then be able to go back in history, look at those same pieces of information, and use them to predict expected returns. But we can't do that. Well, some can and some can't, and I guess you look at the track records over long periods of time, and you decide who can and who can't. Let me ask you a few questions about reserve. currencies, which is a key theme in your book. If deindustrialization is a real problem, including for national security, isn't having a reserve currency actually a disadvantage?
Starting point is 00:15:34 I'm sorry, I didn't understand your question. Deindustrialization is important. So the United States. You stated a premise that I didn't hear clearly. If deindustrialization, please clarify your question. If deindustrialization is a problem for a nation's middle class, for its national security. You mean the deterioration of its capabilities to earn money. Industrialization. Right. Services would work just as well. It doesn't have to be industry per se, right? So by deindustrialization, I presume you mean the weakening of its earning power and the weakening of its economy. Is that what you're referring to? And it's hard for the United States to build its own ships. We depend on inputs, say, from South Korea. So a strong dollar in that sense is bad. Isn't it then also bad if the dollar is a global reserve currency rather than good? The dollar as a reserve currency gives one the ability to print the world's money. And is that on net a good or bad thing?
Starting point is 00:16:29 It's like debt. Is debt on net good or bad thing? It is both a good and bad thing. Being able to create debt gives you the buying power, being able to print the world's currency, such as when we were in the COVID crisis and being able to print the currency that around the world will be accepted. accepted, allowed us to sell more debt because when you buy debt, it's somebody else's currency. In other words, when one owns debt, the buyer of that debt is owning your promise to
Starting point is 00:17:04 deliver them currency. And when you have the world's reserve currency, it allows you to get into more debt. Now, getting into more debt has historically, if not done correctly or not done sustainably, in a way it creates obligations to pay back. And those obligations to deliver currency and pay back have produced different types of problems in the future. So debt is very short-term stimulative and it's longer-term depressing and the ability to do that and have others take on our liability. As John Connolly said when he was the Treasury Secretary, and the dollar was devaluing and a risk, he said, the dollar is our currency, but it's your problem. And that has a net benefit. It's a net benefit, but like most things, it's cyclical because you have to pay back and it produces problems sometimes when you pay back.
Starting point is 00:18:03 So the United States is more indebted as a result of it being a reserve currency. and it all depends on who's going to get stuck with that. But Germany and Japan can often borrow at lower interest rates than we can. So does having the number one reserve currency matter so much? It matters to the extent that Germany and Japan don't have anywhere as much foreign debt. Their amount of debt... Japan has incredible levels of debt. It's domestic, but they still find people willing to take it.
Starting point is 00:18:33 It's domestic debt. You can trade it on foreign markets, right? Trades at very low yields. But it's domestic. debt. In other words, they found their population to buy it. They're a net creditor country. The United States is a net debtor country. Sure, but again, at the margin, if you look at the debt position of Japan, how much of it they've de facto monetized by trading for zero coupon bonds, the fact that debt sells perfectly well on global markets for the prices and yields it does.
Starting point is 00:19:00 The fact that almost all the main owners of Japanese debt are the Japanese central bank and the Japanese population. It sells very little net on public markets. Okay? Sure, but the yen is traded internationally and Japan has done this without the value of the yen collapsing, hardly. Because of the supply demand that I just described to you. I mean, if the United States had to, we would then have to have to have this giant debt monetization. We would have to do what they are doing and then it'd have to be in a whole different position. If we had to take our external amount of debt and then say that, we're going to get into a creditor position and that if we get into a creditor position and then we're in a situation where all of our populations owning it, then we could be in a position that's analogous
Starting point is 00:19:51 to that. But I think I've answered your question. We just have a different view. If we think about macroeconomic cycles, Christina Romer claims a lot of downturns are the result of fed contractions. Jim Hamilton claims that some downturns are the result of high oil price shocks, and you have a theory of debt cycles. If you're just trying to portion out mentally, how many of the cycles are fed contractionary shocks, how many are oil shocks, how many are debt cycles? How do you see that landscape? I think that there's goods and services that exist in a certain quantity, and then there's a certain amount of money and credit, and they interact, and that throughout history, if you have, let's say, an oil shock that is not accommodated by an easing of met
Starting point is 00:20:37 central bank policy. In other words, the production of more money and credit, when I'm saying if it was the same money and credit and you had an oil shock, then as oil goes up, something else would have to go down and it would produce one set of circumstances. It wouldn't produce the same inflation. It would produce a concept. and it would produce a transfer of wealth from those who are selling the oil at a high price. They gain wealth. And it would produce a decrease in the wealth from those who are having to pay that higher price. So, for example, it would make Middle Eastern countries richer and it would make American companies and American entities poorer. And that's what would happen in a world in which we were to look at those
Starting point is 00:21:30 items. And that certainly can cause a downturn in the economy. Similarly, now, you can print money and credit. You can create money and credit and it could have its effects. But to answer your question about do oil shocks or Fed policy have an effect, the answer is both because for other reasons, The tightening of money and credit reduces demand for things, and as a result of reducing the demand for things, it weakens the economy. So both an oil price shock or some other shock or a Federal Reserve tightening can cause the economy to weaken. So that's sort of the answer to your question. And then it would have different implications depending on whether the central banks provided more or less money and credit.
Starting point is 00:22:24 We're speaking in November of 2021. Are currently observed rates of inflation in the United States coming to be transitory? And what do you understand by that term? I'll start by what I understand by the term, and then I'll answer your question. By transitory, I think everybody understands that to mean temporary shocks that don't become chronic and therefore we don't have a chronically higher risk. rate of inflation. It sort of settles back to the older rates of inflation that existed before it, but it's not a problem. That's what I mean by transitory. Do you agree with that definition?
Starting point is 00:23:04 Then I'll go on. Sure. That's fine. Yeah. Okay. So, no, I don't believe it'll be transitory. I believe that there are two main sources of inflation. There's the usual supply and demand for goods, cyclical inflation, so that when the... there's a demand for something that there can't be a greater amount of supply being produced for it. There's an upward pressure in that price. And so that comes from strong demand, pressing up against capacity limitations. That's cyclical inflation. And it depends on how far the central bank accommodates that. So that's the cyclical inflation. The second is monetary inflation. When the production of debt is large, but the central bank produces more money and credit that has the effect
Starting point is 00:24:01 of devaluing the value of money and credit, which doesn't look like it is going down as much as it looks like other things are going up so that you see things going up as they are now, and that's monetary inflation. I think right now we have both cyclical, inflation and monetary inflation. So that if you look at the demand for everything, right now, the demand is greater than the capacity. It's really an excess demand issue provided by a lot of money and credit being put it out. And we also are running large deficits. And as we start to look farther forward, we have these very cheap interest rates, which means that it pays to buy things like, let's say houses. I mean, practically, there's no way.
Starting point is 00:24:51 interest rate to speak of. And now a lot of loans are made on interest only loans even. So with hardly any interest rate and not having to pay back principal payments in terms of the amount of ridiculousness that it's gotten to that way, there's a lot of demand for those kinds of things. Now, that could be cyclical, but I don't believe when I look forward that our deficits will be primarily cyclical. So I look then to the issues of politics and the issues of the deficits and the needs for money and credit or the desires for money and credit. And I think that they'll be structural. And I think then also there are certain changes in expenses. For example, while I believe that climate change and moving to cleaner energy and other such moves is very good for our ecosystem.
Starting point is 00:25:47 in the long run, it's also very expensive and it makes less efficiency. So that's going to at that same time add to inflation. So my worry or belief is that that will increasingly be built into the process, which we're seeing, for example, in terms of changes in compensation, changes in many, many things. Everybody's seeing inflation around them and it's not just something that's going to settle back. So if I take the cyclical piece, it's going to require enough of a tightening, if you were to deal with that, enough of a tightening in monetary policy to stop that buying. And that the consequences of that would be very bearish for markets. And it would be very bearish for the economy. And I believe too bearish for the Federal Reserve to want to tolerate.
Starting point is 00:26:42 and that would only deal with the cyclical inflation pressures, whereas at the same time we have the structural issues of those kinds of deficits that need to be monetized. So for those reasons, I don't believe it's transitory that we will go back to what we experienced before. If you had to describe it in its most fundamental terms, your advantage as an investor compared to other professionals. Is it that you're smarter, you process more information,
Starting point is 00:27:12 you have better managerial methods. How would you pin down your unique advantage and expertise? Well, a few things. I systemize and built an organization that systemize the process to seek the timeless and universal truths of the cost-effect relationships. So we have 1,400 people or so. We spend hundreds of millions of dollars each year on data. and quantitative. And I think it's really that the building of timeless and universal decision rules that have gone back on when I say timeless and universal, I learned early on that many things that happened to me and came as a surprise were things that didn't happen in my lifetime, but happened many times before. The first of those, in 1971, I was clerking on the floor of the New
Starting point is 00:28:10 York Stock Exchange when on August 15th, President Nixon got on and said, we are not going to pay the gold. I went on the floor of the stock exchange. That never happened to me before. I thought it would be a crisis and everything would go down. And I was totally wrong. And I found out that at the stock market that morning went up more than it had in decades. And that led me to research and find out that on March 5th, 1933, President Roosevelt did the exact same thing, and it led to the exact same result. And I learned at that mistake, that things that happened in my lifetime, but happened before and I didn't experience, were just rules. And so I needed to study, for example, the dynamic of the Great Depression. And by studying that dynamic of the Great Depression, I and we at Bridgewater were able
Starting point is 00:29:05 to anticipate the 2008 financial crisis and do very well in it only because we looked at those things that happened before. And so it's that which led me to do this study. I did this study not to write a book. I did the study because these things that are happening now did not happen in my lifetime. So I wanted to study the cycles like the rise and decline of reserve currencies, empires, and so on. So I needed to study the last 500 years. And so what is conveyed in this book is what I learned from doing those studies, those patterns. And I put it out there for people to judge for themselves, the merit of them.
Starting point is 00:29:49 They can judge for themselves. I understand different people might have different views and it's totally their prerogative. It's out there for people to learn. And it's been that approach and the systemization of that approach with a lot of great people that has been the basis of our success. Your management idea for radical transparency, where did that come from and how did it evolve? When did you start it?
Starting point is 00:30:14 You know, I started Bridgewater. I didn't even think of it as starting as a company, but just two years after I got out of school. And it was, you know, me, and there wasn't a company, really. There was somebody I'd played rugby with and then a couple other people. And the idea was, we're going to be truthful with each other, truthful and transparent. I have this belief that what brings me satisfaction is excellent work and excellent relationships. And I believe that I was taught it really in the markets through my
Starting point is 00:30:43 experience that being as accurate as possible is my goal. And to get at truth, what is true is fundamentally important in both making better decisions and also making good relationships, trustful relationships. And so for that reason, it seemed apparent that whether it's in the markets or it's with dealing with people, that being radically truthful and trying to work things through to find out what the best thing to do given those realities are is fundamentally beneficial. So I think I was all through my life, maybe, to some extent, I was influenced to do that. it just seems like such the obviously better thing to do than to be the other. I think it's very odd that the world questions being very radically truthful and radically
Starting point is 00:31:37 transparent with each other to try to find out what's true. I think that's a problem that the world faces in terms of those sort of things. But anyway, I came by it that way. And I wouldn't compromise it. And as the company grew, so as I say, we grew from a couple of people. in my two-bedroom apartment. It came out of the other part of the other bedroom. And then it grew as we grew to, you know, let's say 1,500 people.
Starting point is 00:32:02 There needed to be an organization and a culture that is built around those things. And so that became paramount importance. And so we built our culture. And it's not for some people. And it's great for other people. So with time, we've done that. And that's what we do. And that has served us really.
Starting point is 00:32:24 great. It served us not only in terms of the investment management aspects of it, but it's also served us very well in our relationships, that we can talk about anything, frankly, and that we can deal with anything. And as a result of that, it produces the dealing with things well, and it also produces better relationships. So it's been something that I believe has been key to our success. And it's also something I recommend very highly. I understand people aren't used to it and so on. It can be adapted to it. So I recommend that that's how it developed. And what's your model for why more of the world hasn't followed suit?
Starting point is 00:33:05 Is it that leaders are cowards? Too many workers are too emotionally fragile, just status quo bias, or what? I think it starts partially neurologically and partially how we're raised. There's an instinct to view disagreement as a fight. There's a fight or flight response sometimes to disagreement rather than a curiosity to try to find out what's true. And then I think that we're raised in an educational system in which people are reinforced for having the correct answer. Like there is a correct answer. I mean, certainly there's a correct answer.
Starting point is 00:33:45 Two plus two is four. But sometimes in things, there isn't. And that to not know well and to disagree, are, you know, bad things. And so I think we're raised that way. And I think it becomes sort of a habit that disagreement causes angst. So my theory, I asked neuroscientists, I ask psychologists about it, and they come back with those kinds of answers as to why that's the case. But I do find that I found it in Bridgewater and other ways, that that's for most people, maybe half the population, or more, with practice and in an environment in which it's valued intellectually that they can get used
Starting point is 00:34:30 to it and then not want it any other way. So let me just reverse it. I would sort of say to anybody, if we disagree, do you want me to have a good conversation with you? Like maybe I think you and I are having some disagreement as to how the economy works or whether the markets are efficient and so on. Is this a good thing or is that something that produces angst? I think it's a good. thing. And then do you want me to be totally transparent with you about what I think or do you want me to hold it to myself and ask you the same question? I'd say, I want to hear whatever you think because if it's on the table, we can deal with it and if it's not. And so there's two parts to our brain. There's the intellectual part of our brain and there's the emotional part of our brain.
Starting point is 00:35:15 And the intellectual part of the brain usually says, yes, I would like to know and I'd like to be able to have that exchange. And the emotional part of our brain seems in conflict with that. That's what the psychologists and neuroscientists say. And that's why it's interesting to them to see how we've created this different sort of culture. It's not easy. It's like eating healthy or doing exercise or so on. And if you're around a lot of people who recognize that it's healthy and you lived in that kind of an environment, you probably want to do that. And you, in fact, maybe wouldn't want it to be the other way. many people who work at Bridgewater would find it very difficult to work in most other companies because it wouldn't operate that way. So that's what I think causes it. Anyway, the experts who
Starting point is 00:36:01 are more expert at figuring out the reasons explain to me. And that brings true and it's been consistent with our experiences. With work from a distance, we're now recording many more business calls. So do you think your method of recording every conversation in the company will actually went out through a kind of backdoor mechanism? The recording, just to be clear, is for the purpose of providing transparency, because I think that the wrestling around with questions is something that a lot of people don't get exposure to. And so when I was running the company and everybody comes out with answers, but no real
Starting point is 00:36:42 thinking behind those answers, that wouldn't be something that I would have wanted if I was in their shoes. So I wanted to share that. It's something people could do or not do it. You know, you don't have to record it. You can't record it. Truthfulness. But the putting up the reality of if it's true, you could show it. And everybody will judge whether it's true for themselves. So that recording and showing it, I don't know whether others will do it or how they will use it. I suspect they're not using most of those to try to get at truth. I'm just saying that that's helped me and us a lot. What do you think you know about psychometrics that other bosses do not? How do you use psychometrics more effectively? Well, I think I know a lot about psychometrics because of my experiences and the pursuit of it as an important interest to me.
Starting point is 00:37:33 And I think that most bosses don't know anything about psychometrics and I would encourage them to learn about psychometrics. So, psychometrics. Psychometrics are means by which, asking a bunch of questions and so on, helps to measure how somebody thinks about things. It's common sense. If we ask a bunch of questions, we can learn about what your profile is. So online for free, I put out our version that I worked with three great psychometricians to produce, and people can experience it for themselves. It's called Principles You.
Starting point is 00:38:12 Go online. It takes about a half hour to do and see how. well it describes how you think what your preferences are. And there's a cool thing that allows you to have somebody else do the same. And you could put it in and you could see how it describes your relationship based on how you think. Now, the reactions to those things have been amazing, that they're amazingly effective. But it's not a new science. It's something existed a long time ago, started a long time ago. I started because I saw that people's approaches to thinking were different, and I didn't understand it. So I gave 150 managers in my company, first the Myers-Briggs test,
Starting point is 00:38:57 and it came back, and I asked them how accurately it described how they thought rated on a scale of 1 to 5. 85% of them said it described them as a 4 or 5, so very well. And I read these descriptions, and in some cases I said, I can't even believe that people think that way. Our thinking ways are different and based on those preferences. So, yes, psychometrics, I have spoken to the best psychologist, the ones who helped me build this other test that's now available free for everyone, principles you, it's called, it's free online, was developed with me working with Adam Grant, John Golden, and Brian little. And if you look at their credentials and so on, they've been doing this for lifetimes. So they're the
Starting point is 00:39:49 experts. That's my interest and that's why I have an interest in it. And I think other people who run organizations or really have to deal with relationships should look into what psychometrics can do to help them. Do you think Bridgewater, Annette, is selecting for agreeableness or disagreeableness, as one might express. We much prefer dishonest, thoughtful, disagreeableness because we don't want answers as much as we want reasoning to examine the reasoning that leads to the answers. If you apply psychometrics to the United States of America, our moral character and psychology, where exactly are we falling short, most of all? I think the greatest problem that we have is fighting with each other. over views and opinions to the point that we are risking a civil war. And the question for all
Starting point is 00:40:46 disagreements and all major disagreements is how do you know you're right? You know, if two people are in a disagreement about there are opinions of whether you like something or not. So let me put them into two categories. You have an opinion about something I have an opinion. Will the stock market go up or down or is tomorrow going to be like this or that? And we have an opinion. if there are two people who have an opinion, how do you know you're the one that has the right one or the wrong one? I've learned from mistakes. I worry about being wrong and that by worrying about being wrong, I don't know if I'm the wrong one or the right one. The only way I can get to that answer is to find the smartest people I know who disagree with me and I hear their reasoning.
Starting point is 00:41:31 That's a path that has worked well. But I think if we now applied this to the country as a whole and we have disagreed. I think our best question is, how are we going to successfully and not antagonistically get to the desired answer? So I think it requires thoughtful disagreement. Frankly, I think there's only two things I really care about. I care more than anything that we together as a country come up, resolve our differences, as democracy used to work, resolve our differences and be productive. If we could be productive and resolve our differences so that we have internal order and harmony, I don't really care much about other things.
Starting point is 00:42:18 There are some opinions that it's got to be exactly this way or that way. And I think that we're in a dangerous situation. I have a principle, which is if the cause you are behind or the cause that people are behind are more important to them than they're. the system, the system is in jeopardy. And I think that's the case now. So yes, I would wish that if I was president of the United States, I think it's such an important thing. I would probably have a bipartisan cabinet and I would try to bring together the middle and then have those in the middle try to deal with those at the extremes because I'm afraid that there will be a pulling to each of those
Starting point is 00:43:05 extremes and that there will be irreconcilable differences between those extremes and that it will threaten rule of law and threaten democracy. So that's what I think about it as it relates to politics and government. It's striking to me how much your approach to U.S. history is informed by what I take to be an understanding of Chinese history, so the cyclical emphasis. What is your favorite Chinese dynasty and why? Well, just to be clear on your first statement, it's not Chinese or American, as is described in the book. I took all powers that existed over the last 500 years, 11 of those powers, the empires, the rising on, I looked at them all. And then I also, because the patterns existed in China, I feel I need to understand China well, I also took the dynasties back to 600. So I
Starting point is 00:44:02 saw these patterns over and over again, and they're not Chinese, they're not American, they're universal because human nature is universal. So when I look at a Chinese dynasty or a great European power and so on, there's the parts of them, they all have risen and they have all declined. And so when we say that we like a dynasty, I like the things that make it rise and be healthy and I don't like the things that make it to climb and be unhealthy. So I don't feel there's a dynasty or an empire that I admire in totality. It's those things that I admire. And what those things are across, they're measured in the book. I gave 18 measures of them. But there are certain basic things they come down to a lot. And one, it starts partially with leaders who make
Starting point is 00:44:55 things work well. There's a cycle. There's a new order. And a new order means that after some conflict, the new power takes over. They win. There's a leader or leaders who then at that point have to consolidate their power from those who are in opposition to them and so on. And then they have to build a direction. And that direction comes down to basic things such as first and foremost, education. And when I mean education, I mean both education of facts, like, do you know these facts? Can you read, write, and do arithmetic kind of thing? But also education in civility on how to behave well with others and your personal responsibility, which is usually traditionally has been guided by the family or could be guided by religion and could be in the schools, but to know how to be a person of good
Starting point is 00:45:52 character and relate well to others, dynasties that did that. And you could look at the beginning of all of those dynasties, the Tang dynasty, the Song Dynasty, the Ming Dynasty, just as you could look at it in terms of the early stages of many, many empires, including our own, the American Empire, after World War II, particularly. Okay, education. And then converting that education and that civility to productivity, to be able to work well in a harmonious way with each other, competitive harmonious way, to raise the living standards so that you are earning more than you are spending. This is a fundamental thing, productivity and earn more than your spending, so you don't depend on the building up of debt that eventually you can't pay back,
Starting point is 00:46:47 and that rise. And then I see in all these dynasties and all these dynasties and all all these empires, that there becomes then more debt creation, sometimes more speculation, and there become greater gaps, greater always, they become greater wealth and opportunity gaps. Wealth gaps, because the cycle produces of this different opportunities, and some people make a lot of money and others don't, so naturally produces a wealth gap. But that wealth gap can be self-reinforcing because the parents who have more money give their kids better advantages and they have more power than those who are born into families that don't have much. And so they become that wealth gap. And then they become higher and higher
Starting point is 00:47:34 levels of indebtedness. I've seen this all across countries, all across empires. And then sometimes, because they have borrowing capacity, like having a reserve currency, they can borrow a lot of money. they do that. And so they produce larger wealth gaps, more speculation, and larger and larger wealth gaps. And then something comes along, like they can't do that. They can't live on the debt anymore and their various reasons. And then you see deterioration. You can see deteriorations in even the notion of what people are going after. You know, a poor family having to struggle or a poor society having to struggle develops different values that. one that is born rich and is operating, it can be, in fact, decadent in terms of, you know,
Starting point is 00:48:26 the way that they're operating and so on. And that's an ingredient to decline. And so all of the dynasties or all of the societies that I've seen have had that. And in some cases, acts of nature came along too, where there's an internal conflict over the things I just mentioned, all of them, not having enough money, printing a lot of money, being in a situation where they're at odds with each other, and then often the rising power challenging that. So you see the decline of the Ming dynasty for that reason. You see the decline of the Qing dynasty. You see the decline of France. You see the decline of others for the same reasons. There are also these foreign powers that there's a conflict with and everything. And then sometimes there are these acts of nature like the big drought or the
Starting point is 00:49:14 big flood or something that causes a famine or a pandemic. And then that happens and then that throws everything in the kilter too. So I see those patterns happening over and over everywhere. There's no one dynasty. I like those that do it well and I don't admire those who don't. How does transcendental meditation improve your work relationships? And why choose that kind of meditation rather than some other? I'll take your second question first. Just circumstances led to me I learned transcendental meditation because it was the thing that popped in front of me and I was lucky enough to grab it. It was when the Beatles went to India. They talked about transcendental meditation and it's a big thing.
Starting point is 00:49:57 And there was a center in New York. And then I went and I learned then. That was 1969. So how many years ago, that was a long time ago. And transcendental meditation, I gather a number of other types of that meditation has a mantra. and our mantra is a sound that you repeat in your mind, you're sitting there quietly, and maybe one might think of something like ohm would be a classic example. You repeat ohm in your mind when you're sitting there quietly.
Starting point is 00:50:28 And what that does, it takes your mind away from your thoughts. Your thoughts are like jumping around, and they call it monkey brain. You know, you can't control your thoughts. They're jumping all over. And by repeating that word or sound over and over again, you eventually learn to go into that sound rather than it sort of crowds out all the other stuff. And then eventually it disappears. And then you go into transcending, let's say transcendental state, which means that there's
Starting point is 00:51:01 quiet and peacefulness and you actually don't see anything. And you're descending into your subconscious. Now, your subconscious is like the word implies. It's below what we're conscious about, but it's very important in how we think. Most of our decisions really come from our subconscious. You know, we talk about emotions and things there. They're subconscious. And when you're in your subconscious and you've got this peaceful state, not only does that
Starting point is 00:51:29 peaceful state give you tranquility and so on and very restful, but it also gives you an equanimity, a calmness, and a clarity, and it taps into your subconscious because in your subconscious is where the creativity comes from. You know, you don't sit there and say, I'm going to work hard to be creative. Creative ideas are the sort of things that come to you in a hot shower. You're not even there, and then this idea comes to you, and it bubbles up. And so by putting it with the subconscious, that's good. You tap into that. And then what I found is that aligning, the subconscious and the conscious is also like aligning the emotions with the intellect because we get mixed messaging you know like I say it's like your two brains your conscious brain that might be your
Starting point is 00:52:21 logical brain and then your subconscious brain that's your emotional and you're getting different messages and so the meditation helps to align those and deal with the things that are coming at you And of course, my business and my life brings me a lot of things that are coming at me and they could be, you know, stressful. And I find that by being able to have that kind of state of mind where I can align them, have that equanimity and make the decisions, I found that to be very helpful. What do you enjoy most in jazz music? I enjoy most the combination of extreme talent and spontaneity. particularly when people could do that together. That is something.
Starting point is 00:53:09 When you listen to really talented musicians who could do it like improv, and they can play off of each other and do it that way. Name a group. I particularly like jazz at Lincoln Center, and I like Winton Marcellus and the Winton-Marcellus band. Three quick questions to close. I'll just give you all three. First, why are we undervaluing the ocean right now? Second, why are Cape Buffalo dangerous?
Starting point is 00:53:39 And third, what are you going to do next? The floor is yours. First, let's establish that the ocean is the biggest thing on this planet, the most important environment. We undervalue it because we don't have contact with it. It's like a sheet. The earth above the ocean, the highest point, Everest, is equal to the greatest depth, the Mariana's trench, 11,000 meters. They are both peaks of the same, but the ocean is 72% of the world's surface.
Starting point is 00:54:14 So that means that the space and what it's occupying and the lives that live in it and all of that is more than twice as large as all of the continents combined. And it has an enormous impact on our lives. but when we look at it, we just see this sheet over it that's going up and down and we don't explore it. People who haven't seen beneath that sheet or intellectualize what is beneath the sheet undervalue it for that reason. For me, Jacques Cousteau helped me and excited me. And so as a result of that, I have been excited about the ocean and I realize the importance of the ocean. And as a result one of the things that I've passionate of mine. I've created a ship which is the best oceanographic exploration
Starting point is 00:55:06 and media ship on the seas. We have explorers and scientists go on it and they use it and they capture that and then they're going to be showing that on National Geographic and Disney Plus so that people get inspired about it. But anyway, I think it's for those reasons that they don't and I'm working to rectify that by making that availability. It's called Ocean X. If anyone wants to go on and see what it's doing, you can go on. You can search for Ocean X, and it'll explain that. But Cape Buffalo have killed more people than any other species. More than hippopotamuses have. Even more than hippopotamuses. Okay, so what do I think about Cape Buffalo? I think you're probably referring to my having bow-hunted Cape Buffalo. I love being in nature. I love
Starting point is 00:55:57 the interactions with species. So that experience, which requires focusing one's attention, playing the edge correctly, and being in that environment has been something invigorating. So I assume that that's why you're asking that question. And as terms of what is coming next, I'm 72 years old. I'm in an arc. There's a life arc. And I'm in the part of the life arc of transitioning out of my second phase of my life to my third phase of my life. I believe life takes place in sort of three phases. The first phase is you're dependent on others, you're learning, second phase, you know, you graduate from school, you graduate from whatever college or high school and you go to work and increasingly you're working and others are dependent on you and you're trying to be
Starting point is 00:56:50 successful. And then as you go to your third phase in life, you no longer have any desire to be more successful yourself. You start to care about others and you particularly care about others who will be beyond your, your children, your grandchildren and the like, but also the society. And what you want to do is instinctively pass along those things that have been helpful. And that's the phase of life that I'm in. And so while I'm still playing, my game of the markets and the economy. I'm doing these studies and doing these investments and all that. I like it. The joy of transitioning my company to have others run it, my family. It's like having my family, adult children. I don't want to be responsible for their lives.
Starting point is 00:57:38 I'm there when they need me and so on. And I'm here to pass along the things. And so I think that what's next for me is there's this book, which is passing along what I think are the most important things of our time and thoughts. People could take or leave them, but I think they're important. Others have thought, Henry Kissinger, Larry Summers, others have said that this is a very important book. And anyway, people could judge for themselves. My next will be to complete my economic and investment principles, because I do think differently about economics and investments than some people, which I believe is what has given me the edge. So I want to pass that along. I imagine then in something there for like a year or two, I will do that and then I will
Starting point is 00:58:22 go quiet. Again, everyone, Ray's new book is called Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order, Why Nations Succeed and Fail. Ray Dalio, thank you very much. My pleasure. Thank you very much. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, Stitcher or your favorite podcast app. And if you like this podcast, please consider rating it on iTunes and leaving a review.
Starting point is 00:58:50 This helps other people find the show.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.