Billionaire hedge fund manager Ray Dalio made headlines this week after issuing a stark warning that central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) will soon be prominent across the U.S. and will lead to a dramatic loss of financial privacy.
The comments have led to a flurry of chatter online, including from former Donald Trump adviser Thor Torrens — who claimed that Zcash is the answer to “fixing” financial privacy concerns.
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Ray Dalio’s Warning
Dalio’s interview with Tucker Carlson has now been viewed over half a million times, with most of the social media coverage focusing on his concerns about CBDCs.
During the discussion, the billionaire investor questioned whether central bank digital currencies would even be attractive to hold.
He noted there is an ongoing debate over whether CBDCs would offer interest.
“If they’re not able to offer interest... then they’re not an effective vehicle to hold it in,” Dalio said, arguing that savers would likely prefer money market funds or bonds to avoid depreciation.
Still, his primary concern centered on privacy and state control.
“There will be no privacy,” Dalio warned, emphasizing that “all transactions done with digital currencies will be known.”
While he acknowledged that such transparency could help authorities combat illegal activity, he cautioned that it would also hand governments sweeping new powers.
“They can tax that way. They can take your money. They can establish foreign exchange controls and the like,” Dalio said.
He added that politically disfavored individuals could potentially be “shut off,” and suggested that international holders of a currency might fear sanctions or asset seizures.
At the same time, Dalio downplayed the likelihood of CBDCs becoming dominant.
Despite the risks he outlined, he said he does not expect their development to be “that big of a deal” in terms of scale.
Advocates Push Zcash
In response to Ray Dalio’s comments on X, former Trump adviser Thor Torrens claimed that: “Zcash fixes this.”
The comment reflects a broader push from privacy-focused crypto advocates who argue that Dalio’s warnings about surveillance are what privacy coins were built to prevent.
Zcash (ZEC) is a privacy-first crypto that allows users to send funds either transparently or through shielded transactions.
It uses zero-knowledge cryptography to keep transaction details private. Supporters say this design directly addresses the core risk Dalio described.
Zcash, however, has faced its own controversies over the years. Regulators and compliance advocates have criticized it, arguing that strong privacy tools can obscure illicit activity.
The project has also weathered internal governance and leadership tensions.
Most recently, those tensions spilled into the open after a group of key developers left the Electric Coin Company (ECC), the original organization behind Zcash.
The departure does not mark an end to Zcash development. Instead, the same developers, led by Josh Swihart, regrouped under a new independent structure.
The team has now launched a for-profit startup called cashZ, formed immediately following their exit from ECC.
On Jan. 8, Swihart wrote : “We are all in on Zcash. We need to scale Zcash to billions of users. Startups can scale, but nonprofits can’t. That’s why we created a new Zcash startup.”
Banks Losing Confidence In Fiat, Claims Ray Dalio
The CBDC comments come as part of a broader warning Dalio has been delivering about structural shifts in the global financial system.
Speaking to CNBC on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, the billionaire said “the monetary order is breaking down.”
In his view, central banks are no longer holding fiat currencies and sovereign debt in the same way they once did, pointing to changing capital flows and reserve allocations as evidence.
“You could see it in the numbers of the central banks,” Dalio said, adding that financial coverage tends to focus narrowly on equities while overlooking broader capital movements.
Dalio also warned that trade tensions could morph into what he described as “capital wars,” in which countries grow reluctant to hold one another’s debt.
“Both the holders of U.S. dollar–denominated debt and those who need it — the United States — are worried about each other,” he said.
If countries that hold U.S. debt become uneasy while the U.S. continues to expand supply, Dalio suggested, the imbalance could become a significant pressure point in the global financial system.
At the time, Bitcoin holders took to X to celebrate the comments.
One trader wrote that “Bitcoin is gonna thrive in chaos now,” while another said, “Fiat doubts push more people toward Bitcoin.”
However, not all of the crypto community was convinced, with many highlighting that macroeconomic pressures often weigh down on risk assets.
“Bitcoin is a product of fiat, it will go down as well,” one trader wrote.























































































































































































































































