We are living through some of the most dramatic changes in Bridgewater’s 50-year history. Over the last 12 months, our focus has been on the new reality facing investors, with three interrelated dynamics at its core: (1) a new geopolitical and macroeconomic paradigm that poses (2) a threat to US-concentrated markets and portfolios amid (3) a once-in-a-generation technological disruption.
In our recent Q2 CIO letter to our clients, we described how these dynamics are playing out so far and the tactical and strategic opportunities we see today. Below, we’re sharing three highlights from that letter.
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In the new paradigm, interventionist governments are here to stay.?Last quarter, we wrote about embracing a new geopolitical and macroeconomic paradigm, with modern mercantilism front and center. A few short months later,?modern mercantilism?is everywhere, and it’s becoming entrenched. This makes for a riskier, more zero-sum world, with governments at the wheel. Here are some of our key takeaways:
With little net movement in markets or capital allocation, accumulated imbalances are as large as ever.
Market and portfolio concentration in US assets has shifted very little even as the risks, many of which are emanating from the US, have grown much clearer. Foreigners need the US to drive demand in their economies, while the US is reliant on foreigners’ willingness to keep saving in US assets at current high valuations.?The push toward modern mercantilism now poses a threat to the sustainability of that relationship, creating risks to US exceptionalism.?
While mercantilist policies aim to (and may) lift the US economy by incentivizing domestic production, they also create a need for investment in defense and domestic demand in foreign economies, incentivizing global savers to draw on their savings. They could also temper the willingness to save in the US at current valuations by eating into US profits via tariffs, raising the risk of retaliation, and constraining the Fed. On top of that, the erosion of stable rulemaking along the way undercuts the “institutional stability premium” built into US assets and directly antagonizes foreign investors, whose inflows contributed significantly to the US equity rally of the last few years.
We are seeing signs that investors are starting to respond to these risks by reconsidering how fast they want to keep accumulating US exposure, particularly in currency markets.?In the second quarter, we saw the US dollar sell off alongside global risk assets for the first time in many years, which served as a reminder that USD exposure is not inherently diversifying when risks are emanating from the US itself. Currency hedging and capital savings decisions can be made relatively quickly, and we’ve seen the dollar fall 10% against major crosses year-to-date, in part as investors increased their hedge ratios. Even so, that move is small relative to the secular USD rally.?
Market pricing suggests strategic shifts to build resilience are a pretty good deal right now.
Stepping back, the?inertia in markets means that we’ve gotten months’ worth of valuable information that we don't see fully reflected in prices.?That, of course, creates?tactical opportunities. For example, we see upward pressure on the currencies of global net savers looking to repatriate capital, and pressure for a decline in US equities (excluding AI-adjacent companies), where the broader market is priced at an unwarranted premium with sizable profit risks ahead. We think bonds outside the US look attractive in economies where central banks have maintained restrictive monetary policy despite soft growth and disinflation ahead, and the conditions for gold to extend its rally remain in place.
We also see current market pricing as a gift to investors who are looking to make strategic shifts toward a more resilient portfolio.?It’s a rare time when diversification is better than free, but current pricing suggests that for portfolios concentrated around market cap weights, that’s effectively the case right now. Below are some of the attractive opportunities we see for strategic shifts:
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