
Investor who called 2008 crash delivers grim warning to the US
'If the US doesn't cut the deficit to 3 percent of the GDP, and soon, we risk facing an economic heart attack in the next three years,' Dalio wrote on X. 'The good news is that these cuts are possible.' The national debt is nearing $37 trillion — equal to 99 percent of GDP — and the Congressional Budget Office projects it could hit 150 percent by 2055.
Dalio, founder of Bridgewater Associates — the world's biggest hedge fund — said a 4 percent adjustment to spending and tax revenues could stabilize the economy and even lower interest rates. 'We know this kind of balance is possible because it happened between 1991 and 1998,' he wrote, pointing to previous bipartisan deficit deals.
'My fear is that we will probably not make these needed cuts due to political reasons, and will have even more debt and debt service encroaching on our spending that will ultimately lead to a serious supply-demand problem.' Dalio has repeatedly warned that economic decisions made by the White House will end in economic catastrophe.
In April the billionaire spoke against Trump's decision to launch a global trade war via tariffs on America's trading partners. 'Some people believe that the tariff disruptions will settle down as more negotiations happen and greater thought is given to how to structure them to work in a sensible way,' Dalio wrote in a post on social media site X. 'I am now hearing from a large and growing number of people who are having to deal with these issues that it is already too late.'
JPMorgan's CEO Jamie Dimon (pictured) warned last month that the US economy was on shifting 'tectonic plates' and warned that inflation could once again rear its ugly head. 'You have all these really complex, moving tectonic plates around trade, economics, geopolitics, and future factors, which I think are inflationary: military, restructuring of trade, ongoing fiscal deficits,; he told the Morgan Stanley US Financials Conference. The co-founder of Home Depot Ken Lagone also raised concerns about US debt, and said it is a 'scary' indicator for the state of the economy.
The billionaire said he hoped Washington would heed his warning that 'we have to be mindful of the importance of our status in the world economy and the world markets. 'If we fritter that away, we're in trouble,' the 89-year-old said. 'Four weeks ago, we couldn't float a 20-year bond. They were unbiased. That's a dangerous signal. That's the beginning,' Langone said referencing recent crises in the bond market.
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