Bridgewater founder Ray Dalio has issued a stern warning regarding the Federal Reserve’s announcement to halt quantitative tightening (QT) and shift toward maintaining its balance sheet. He believes this move marks the beginning of a dangerous “shift from tightening to stimulus,” which could lead to explosive asset price increases in assets like gold and Bitcoin before an inevitable bubble burst by the end of 2025. Dalio emphasizes that the current economic environment is vastly different from past QE periods, with asset valuations already highly overstretched.
Fed Policy Shift: From Balance Sheet Reduction to “Stimulative Easing”
Billionaire investor Ray Dalio expresses deep concern over the Fed’s recent policy decision. Starting December 1, 2025, the Fed plans to end QT and instead maintain a $6.5 trillion balance sheet, reinvesting maturing agency securities into Treasury bonds rather than mortgage-backed securities.
- Core Argument: Dalio views this as “stimulus entering a bubble,” not a typical late-cycle response to economic weakness. This contrasts sharply with past QE measures during recessions and asset downturns.
- Current Environment Comparison: The expected earnings yield of the S&P 500 (4.4%) is only slightly above the 10-year Treasury yield (4%), with market risk premiums at just 0.4%. Meanwhile, the economy continues to grow at around 2%, with inflation above target levels.
- Market Interpretation: Analysts suggest that actual liquidity may have already started flowing back in late 2022, with reverse repurchase agreements (RRP) serving as a key channel. The crypto market remains highly sensitive to liquidity shifts.
End of the “Great Debt Cycle”: The Engine Driving Long-Duration Assets
Dalio warns that the massive US fiscal deficits, shortened Treasury maturities due to weak long-term bond demand, and expanding central bank balance sheets collectively signal the nearing end of what he calls the “classic Big Debt Cycle late-stage dynamic.”
- Impact on Assets: This “classic monetary and fiscal interaction” aims to monetize government debt, lowering real interest rates, compressing risk premiums, and boosting P/E multiples.
- Assets Likely to Benefit: Long-duration assets such as tech stocks, AI-related equities, and inflation hedges like gold are expected to see significant gains.
- Historical Reference: Dalio draws parallels to late 1999 or 2010-2011, anticipating a strong liquidity “melt-up” phase. However, he warns this phase will ultimately be curtailed by excessive risk, leading to a bubble burst.
Gold and Bitcoin: Hedging and Speculative Battlegrounds
Against the backdrop of shifting liquidity mechanisms, gold and Bitcoin—key hedging assets—are especially noteworthy.
- Gold Performance: After the Fed’s announcement, gold prices initially fluctuated but quickly recovered, surpassing $4,000 per ounce. Dalio explains that with the 10-year Treasury yielding only 4%, investors need to expect annual gold appreciation of more than 4% to justify holding, especially as fiat currencies lose purchasing power due to increased supply.
- Bitcoin’s Potential: Historically, Bitcoin has outperformed gold and all other risk assets during times of financial uncertainty and crises. Market reactions to the halt in QT may lag, with some analysts suggesting that crypto markets need to see actual QE implementation—not just the end of tightening—to bottom out and rebound.
Final Investment Advice: Beware the “Melt-up” Peak, Exit Strategically
Dalio’s concluding advice is that the optimal time to sell is before liquidity “melt-up” peaks and the Fed takes enough tightening measures to burst the bubble. While liquidity-driven rallies can inflate asset prices, investors must remain aware that such gains are unsustainable.
For Bitcoin, its role as a hedge against sovereign currency risk is reinforced in this environment. However, during a market bubble burst, its safe-haven status could face short-term liquidity shocks.
Conclusion
Dalio’s warning sketches a potential extreme scenario: in the late stage of the debt cycle, coordinated monetary and fiscal policies could trigger a frenzy of asset price inflation, with gold and Bitcoin standing out as key hedges. Nonetheless, crypto investors should see this as a window of opportunity rather than an eternal bull market—being prepared for the eventual “pop,” the critical point when policy tightening triggers a market correction.
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