1 The Story
The principles machine
Ray Dalio (born 1949) founded Bridgewater Associates in 1975 — from his apartment — and grew it into the world's largest hedge fund, known for systematic, research-driven macro investing.1
He set out his approach to work and life in the bestseller Principles (2017), and popularised ideas like the 'All Weather' portfolio and 'how the economic machine works.'1
2 The Big Idea
Diversify into uncorrelated bets — and systemize your learning
The 'Holy Grail' is combining many good, uncorrelated return streams.
Dalio's core investment insight: a handful of uncorrelated bets, each with a modest edge, combine into a far smoother, less risky return than any one alone. His core life insight: turn painful mistakes into written principles you can follow next time.1
3 The Method
The Dalio approach
Uncorrelated diversification
Combine many good bets that don't move together — the closest thing to a free lunch in investing.
Balance to the environment
'All Weather' — structure a portfolio to hold up across growth/inflation regimes, not bet on one.
Radical transparency
Seek truth through open, honest disagreement; ego and blind spots are the enemy.
Turn mistakes into principles
Write down what each painful lesson teaches, so you systematically improve.
4 Try It Today
Test the idea for yourself
A no-risk exercise
Take any two markets you think move independently (say, stocks and gold). Picture holding both: when one zigs, the other often doesn't. That smoothing — multiplied across many uncorrelated bets — is Dalio's diversification insight. Then try his habit: write one trading mistake as a principle to follow next time.
5 In Their Words
Ray Dalio, quoted
"He who lives by the crystal ball will eat shattered glass."— Ray Dalio1
6 The Books & Their Big Ideas
What they wrote — and what to take from it
7 Watch & Read
Go deeper
- CONCEPTRisk & Position Sizing
- BOOKPrinciples
- READ"Ray Dalio" — Wikipedia.1
§ Sources
- "Ray Dalio," Wikipedia — en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Dalio
