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Bridgewater Associates co-CIO Ray Dalio has slammed the US debt limit as "a farce". "It works like a bunch of alcoholics who write laws to enforce drinking limits," he said. "We all know that there is no real debt limit because what is called a debt limit never actually limits the debt," the Bridgewater Associates CIO wrote in a LinkedIn post published Wednesday. Congress has acted 78 separate times to extend the debt limit since 1960, according to the Treasury Department. Read more: A US debt default or even a near-nonpayment could plunge the economy into recession, top Goldman Sachs economist says
Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken said it named CJ Rinaldi as its new chief compliance officer, hiring him from rival Blockchain.com, as it continues to revamp its compliance program after a sanctions violation settlement amid increasing regulatory scrutiny of the crypto sector. Mr. Rinaldi most recently served as Blockchain.com’s chief compliance officer for about a year, where he implemented global compliance frameworks and mitigated compliance risks. Newsletter Sign-up WSJ | Risk and Compliance Journal Our Morning Risk Report features insights and news on governance, risk and compliance. As part of the agreement, Kraken will invest $100,000 in its sanctions compliance controls, which include training and technical measures. Kraken also hired a new chief financial officer and new chief marketing officer last year.
Jan 23 (Reuters) - The 20 best performing hedge fund managers earned $22.4 billion for investors in 2022, marking their slimmest gains since 2016 as many firms, including Tiger Global Management, struggled with slumping financial markets, LCH Investments data show. The top 20 managers, led by Ken Griffin's Citadel, Bridgewater Associates and D.E. Overall, hedge funds lost $208 billion in 2022 for clients, marking the biggest single-year decline since 2008, when they lost $565 billion, LCH data showed. Hedge funds, which were jointly managing $3.3 trillion on Dec. 31, 2022, according to eVestment data, often promise to outperform, especially when markets are stumbling. Shaw, Millennium Management, Soros Fund Management, Elliott Management, and Viking Global Investors also ranked in the top 10.
Brothers Taylor and Brett Sohns have worked on Wall Street for most of their careers. These parameters can be found in what's called the "prospectus," which is a document that outlines the ETF's investment strategy and potential risk. Consider the process of buying cereal, explained Taylor: "Say you want Lucky Charms. The S&P 500 is down about 18% year-to-date, so we're outperforming that by about 5%," explained Taylor. While you may not do exceptionally well, you'll also never do exceptionally bad, explained Taylor: "In a rip-roaring up market, his product and our product will underperform.
Ray Dalio’s “Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises” is the work of a self-taught economist and self-made billionaire. The first 70 pages of the book, in which the founder of Bridgewater Associates introduces his theory of debt cycles, have no citations. He apparently stands on the shoulders of nobody. Mr. Dalio’s education came on trading floors, not in classrooms. “Big Debt Crises” is his response to that challenge: a compilation of historical case studies presented as a trader would have experienced them in real time.
A man pauses outside of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on January 15, 2016 in New York City. While they aren't internally announced and paid until early next year, firms are wrapping up discussions about the size of bonus pools that divisions will be able to disperse from. And for many firms, the pools are being resized from Olympic to kiddie. The Financial Times reported Friday that JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and Bank of America are considering cutting bonus pools within M&A and IPO teams by 30%. More on how crypto firms are hoping ads can quell trust concerns.
The bubble in predicting the end of the world
  + stars: | 2022-12-01 | by ( Edward Chancellor | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +7 min
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers says the world faces the “most complex, disparate and cross-cutting set of challenges” he’s ever encountered. In his wittily titled “The End of the World is Just the Beginning”, the geopolitical strategist suggests that a number of countries from Germany to China face insuperable demographic challenges. The threat to America’s global hegemony from China is the subject of Ray Dalio’s “The Changing World Order”. The U.S. stock market bubble has only partially deflated, bond yields around the world trail below inflation, and global property markets are exposed to rising interest rates. The Assyrian who forecast the world would end in 2800 BC was wrong.
Ray Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates, received an award from the China General Chamber of Commerce-USA in February 2022. China News Service | China News Service | Getty ImagesBEIJING — American billionaire Ray Dalio said while he's far less familiar with China's new leadership team than prior officials, he expects worries about their future policies are overdone. Here are the highlights:China's leadership reshuffle"I want to emphasize that none of the new people appear to be extremists," Dalio said. Dalio said the leadership changes mean most of the people he knew who were "reformist-globalists" are being replaced. This week, Xi and U.S. President Joe Biden met in person for the first time since Biden took office.
A stunning reversal in Chinese stocks in November has investors once again reassessing whether now is the time to double down on this once-hot market. "Biden's comments that he did not see an imminent threat to Taiwan from China were also noteworthy...," said Chang to CNBC. Investors CNBC spoke to remain encouraged by the country's much-needed reopening but want more evidence to suggest Beijing is easing its zero-Covid policy. The latest third-quarter 13F filings ending Sept. 30 also show several reputable hedge funds reducing their exposure to Chinese tech stocks. These positions may have changed since the end of September, but the data does suggest buy-side investors remain cautious on owning Chinese tech.
HONG KONG, Nov 16 (Reuters) - Some of Asia’s largest hedge funds scooped up large stakes in Chinese e-commerce giant Pinduoduo in the third quarter while cutting holdings in its rival JD.com, according to their latest regulatory filings. Pinduoduo, the e-commerce platform known for selling inexpensive goods, in September launched its first overseas site in the United States. JD.com ADRs and Hong Kong shares (9618.HK) fell more than 20% each in the third quarter. As for JD.com, it is a pure domestic play with a higher correlation to overall trends in Chinese markets, analysts say. They also say investors could be moving their holdings in JD.com ADRs to Hong Kong-listed ones to hedge U.S. delisting risks.
Co-CEOs of Bridgewater Associates Nir Bar Dea and Mark Bertolini. When it comes to the world of hedge funds, there's arguably no bigger name than Ray Dalio. It's not just the fact that Dalio grew Bridgewater Associates to the $150 billion behemoth that it is today. To be sure, Bridgewater isn't the only hedge fund in the midst of a changing of the guard. The dispute between billionaire Dan Och and Sculptor Capital Management doesn't seem like it'll be cooling off anytime soon.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFor the Fed to reach its inflation target, it has to get the unemployment rate up, says Bridgewater's PattersonRebecca Patterson, Bridgewater Associates chief investment strategist, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss the Fed's effort to get inflation under control, the market pricing in discounted interest rates, and the trajectory for monetary easing.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Bridgewater Associates' Rebecca PattersonRebecca Patterson, Bridgewater Associates chief investment strategist, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss the Fed's effort to get inflation under control, the market pricing in discounted interest rates and the trajectory for monetary easing.
Bridgewater AssociatesAs cochief investment officer, Jensen oversees Bridgewater's investment strategies and research efforts as well as its investment talent. Karen Karniol-Tambour, cochief investment officer for sustainabilityKaren Karniol-Tambour, Bridgewater's cochief investment officer for sustainability. Rebecca Patterson, chief investment strategistBridgewater's chief investment strategist, Rebecca Patterson. In 2012, she joined as the chief investment officer of Bessemer Trust, managing $85 billion in client assets. The partnership elected three directors to Bridgewater's operating board of directors, which now has control over Bridgewater after Dalio relinquished control of the hedge fund.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCash looks better than stocks but worse than inflation-linked bonds, says Bridgewater's Karen Karniol-TambourKaren Karniol-Tambour, co-CIO at Bridgewater Associates, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss the need for further Fed tightening and the difficulty markets face in trying to accurately price in economic scenarios, as well as the strength of the dollar compared to stocks.
Carlyle's David Rubenstein on how to invest now
  + stars: | 2022-10-31 | by ( Chris Taylor | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
It may have been drawn up under England's King John, but these days it belongs to David M. Rubenstein. To learn how Rubenstein amassed those kind of resources, look no further than his new book, “How To Invest: Masters on the Craft." At that time, there was not a whole lot of investing going on, with his father working a blue-collar existence for the Post Office, living paycheck-to-paycheck. Nevertheless, Rubenstein seems to have done alright, with a net worth currently estimated by Forbes at $3.2 billion. RUBENSTEIN'S ADVICE TO INVESTORS BIG AND SMALLWhen it comes to philanthropy, Rubenstein takes a surprisingly hands-on approach – no foundation, no staff, just him.
Vinay Trivedi, a vice president at General Atlantic focusing on the technology sector. I don't think we necessarily transitioned fast enough to how people learn if we're only doing audio from home. - David Israel, 27, vice president at Credit SuisseAngel Pu Shum is a principal within Warburg Pincus's technology group. -Allison Boxer, 29, senior vice president and economist at PIMCONoah Zerance, a vice president with Bank of America's global sustainable-finance group. and the response would be, 'Well, we don't know how we do it yet.
General view of Saudi Aramco's Ras Tanura oil refinery and oil terminal in Saudi Arabia May 21, 2018. JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs made nearly $77 million and $42 million respectively in investment banking fees in Saudi Arabia last year, Refinitiv data showed. "For the most part, I do not see U.S. companies actively avoiding Saudi Arabia due to recent political tensions," said Adel Hamaizia, managing director at Highbridge Advisory and a visiting fellow at Harvard University. FDI FLATForeign direct investment still lags behind targets, though there has been movement in new sectors as the kingdom opens up. As Boeing netted an $80 million defence contract last year, Fedex announced a $400 million 10-year investment plan in the country, the Arab world's biggest economy.
Interactive Brokers founder Thomas Peterffy is bearish on stocks over the next few quarters. Thomas Peterffy, the billionaire founder of Interactive Brokers, doesn't see the Federal Reserve succeeding in its goal to bring inflation back down to its long-term target of 2%. That doesn't mean, however, that the Federal Reserve will remain committed to reining in inflation, like they've pledged. Investors "are not accounting for the earnings hit that we will get from reduced demand," Peterffy told Insider on Friday. Rallies have been continually stymied by realizations that the Fed is going to have to raise interest rates higher than investors had originally expected.
Ray Dalio says we will be searching for a true store hold of wealth for the next 10 years. On Tuesday, Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio took the stage during the Greenwich Economic Forum to discuss the state of the global economy. Central to his discussion was the belief that the Federal Reserve will need to navigate between inflation and a weak economy going forward. But the magnitude of the current economic crisis is not something we're used to, he noted. What is the true store hold of wealth will be the question of our time, Dalio said.
But first, the latest installment in Wall Street's war for tech talent. Big Tech wants its engineers back. In the ongoing war for top engineering talent, Big Tech has landed the latest blow against one of Wall Street's most powerful firms. Read more about the top firms scooping up recent Goldman departures, and how it could be representative of the larger issues Wall Street faces when trying to attract tech talent. Robo-advisor Betterment just launched customized crypto portfolios, the Wall Street Journal reports.
Investors should brace for a 5% stock market decline if the reading comes in above 8.3%, JPMorgan's trading desk said in a note this week. The stock market could continue to tumble in the face of rising inflation and a recession. Investors should wait to get bullish on the falling stock market as inflation and rate-hike concerns continue to roil the valuation norms of the past two decades, according to Bank of America. Has the stock market found a bottom yet? US stock futures rise early Thursday, ahead of the eagerly awaited US inflation data due later this morning.
The US faces a "perfect storm" of debt, political strife, and an overseas war, Ray Dalio said. Dalio warned the Fed will have to hurt markets and the economy to conquer stubborn inflation. Dalio complained that "ridiculously stupid" interest rates and a flood of cheap money have inflated US asset prices and overstimulated the economy in recent years. "They will raise interest rates to the point that there's enough economic pain and financial market pain to deal with that," he said. Dalio, the founder of Bridgewater Associates, recently stepped down as the hedge fund's co-chief investor, and now serves as a mentor to its bosses.
Co-CEO Nir Bar Dea is already making changes to its famously radically transparent culture. Bridgewater Associates' co-CEO Nir Bar Dea is looking to make some changes to its controversial culture as founder Ray Dalio takes a step back. "The ideas are different," Dea said speaking at the Bloomberg Invest event Wednesday. Changing the culture for the next generationThe culture changes are already underway, said Dea. In a tweet last week, Ray Dalio said that he would give up control of the $150 billion hedge fund.
I'm Jeffrey Cane, stepping out from behind the 10 Things on Wall Street newsletter curtain to help catch you up on all things financial today. But first: Could I interest you in some life insurance? Yes, life insurance is one answer, but it's life insurance with a twist. This little-known tax tool, which may be coming under increasing scrutiny, is called private placement life insurance, or PPLI. It is effectively a life insurance policy that is owned by an offshore trust.
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