Dalio's Key Long-Read: How to Position in the Current Market Environment?

marsbit发布于2026-06-18更新于2026-06-18

文章摘要

Ray Dalio's latest article provides a strategic framework for navigating the current investment landscape, characterized by a market heavily concentrated in AI and other revolutionary new technologies. He argues that investors should view their decisions like moves in a game (e.g., chess, poker), assessing the current "board" shaped by key forces: the AI-driven industry cycle, debt/money, politics, geopolitics, and nature. He warns that such technology-driven periods naturally involve high excitement, volatility, and uncertainty, with historical precedents showing most investors fail by concentrating bets on a few leading companies. The core choice is whether to (a) overweight the new tech sector, (b) match index weightings, or (c) diversify away from this concentration. Dalio strongly advocates for (c) – embracing diversification. He emphasizes that large, new tech companies face inherent risks: over/under-investment, external shocks, future disruption, and intense geopolitical competition (notably from China). His guiding principle is the "holy grail" of investing: a well-engineered portfolio of 15+ high-quality, uncorrelated, and risk-balanced bets. Mathematically, this significantly improves the risk-return ratio compared to any concentrated position. Given the current environment's high uncertainty and concentration, he believes no one can reliably predict outcomes to justify large, concentrated bets. Dalio also expresses a tactical view that future equity returns ap...

This article aims to explore: how you should play your hand in the current investment game.

Imagine you are playing bridge, poker, chess, or Go. When it’s your turn to make a move, there’s a computer beside you that assesses the situation and offers suggestions. In my view, investing is just like that—whether you use a computer's help or not, you should do this: based on the current state of the "board," ask yourself what the next move should be. In other words, you need to act based on the existing characteristics of the market and the various forces influencing it.

I have been playing this investment game for many years. At this stage, my goal is not only to share my own way of playing, but also to build a platform where everyone can explore their own way of investing, learn from and backtest past performance, and truly master the craft. I believe that for a given hand, there are right ways to play and wrong ways to play. Therefore, when faced with a situation like XYZ, you should ask yourself, "How should I bet in this situation?" and be able to give a good answer.

Now, I want to share with you my views on the current market characteristics, what I think should be done, and what I am actually doing.

How to Deal with the Current Environment

What are the most important environmental factors right now? How should one bet under these factors?

In my view (and likely the view of many), we are in an industry cycle driven by a significant new technology—primarily artificial intelligence—with only a handful of companies dominating the market trend. These companies command an extremely high proportion of the overall market capitalization and have a huge impact on the market and economy. All such periods share a common theme: immense excitement, uncertainty, and volatility emerge around the new tech industry, which transmits through the industry to the global stock market. Therefore, the volatility and uncertainty surrounding this industry are crucial.

Additionally, there is uncertainty stemming from other major drivers. I call them the "Five Big Forces":

  • The state of debt and money;

  • Political and social issues (which can significantly impact market factors like taxes);

  • How geopolitical factors (like wars) affect markets;

  • Acts of nature;

  • The development of new technologies.

I would feed these conditions into my investment system to consider how to bet in such an environment, while also thinking independently about the specific directions to bet on.

When thinking about how to deal with this environment, the most important question is: What choice do you really want to make?

  • (a) Overweight the new technology, overexpose to this emerging industry or its top few companies, relative to broad indices like the S&P 500;

  • (b) Keep exposure roughly aligned with index weights;

  • (c) Diversify away from this concentration.

Almost everyone wants to find the best investment and is willing to work hard for it. Right now, a new technology seems to be changing everything. However, history shows that at this stage of the cycle, most people fail because they put most of their chips on the stocks of a few leading tech companies. There is a logic to this, and it has always evolved this way in the past. Although this AI technology is indeed unique, there have been many equally "unique" new technologies in history that serve as analogies and references. People should study these cases; if they choose to ignore them, they must be able to explain well why this time is different.

The Risk is Undoubtedly High

All major new technology cases in the past have shown similar evolutionary trajectories due to the same logical reasons. High risk and great uncertainty are inherent characteristics of these new technology companies. Looking back at the performance of these companies in similar historical environments, even the most revolutionary and long-prospering ones like Microsoft and Apple suffered significant setbacks at similar stages of development. Moreover, in the early stages of these new tech companies, it was not easy to tell which would succeed and which would fail (e.g., IBM). If you look at all these cases, you'll see that major new technology companies have a naturally highly uncertain future.

For example, they either overinvest or underinvest. The reason: if they underinvest to win the competition, they are bound to fail; but they also cannot accurately foresee the future to judge if they are overinvesting. Both overinvestment and underinvestment are costly.

Furthermore, they cannot accurately foresee all changes, including external shocks like monetary tightening, wars, major tax adjustments, etc. Therefore, they all go through intense boom and bust cycles: first exciting investors, then frightening them and shaking out weak hands, eventually leading to exaggerated market swings. And just as these new technologies and companies disrupt their predecessors, most of them are eventually disrupted by newer technologies and companies in ways we couldn't have imagined beforehand. Therefore, we should also consider whether the current new technology and tech companies face the same risks. The impact of quantum computing is one known known risk. What about the risks not yet imagined?

What about risks from competitors? For example, China is producing and promoting AI technology, and Chinese policymakers have fundamentally different views on the economy and AI. We are in a new technology war, and world leaders believe they must win it. Their understanding of AI and its impact on the economy and human well-being will prompt them to offer this technology for free or at low cost because it has a huge productivity boost and raises living standards overall. In their view, the overall benefit of having more people use these new technologies outweighs profits. I believe they will compete internationally, as they have done with cars, solar panels, batteries, and many other products.

The current environment is reminiscent of many historical cases offering valuable lessons. I cannot help but think of how Britain defeated the Netherlands in key industries like shipbuilding at the end of the Dutch Empire and the beginning of the British Empire. AI stocks also face other risks, such as wealth taxes and other tax increases that could force large shareholders to sell massively; and rising anti-AI sentiment that could limit corporate space to advance the technology.

I could list more concerning things, but I could also list an equally long list of the great opportunities AI will create—and that's where I'm willing to place bets. I am not saying these risks will necessarily happen, nor that one shouldn't bet on AI companies. I am only saying that there is undoubtedly a high degree of concentration risk in the market, and people should be aware of how to deal with such an environment. Based on my study of all similar cases and their logical reasons, I am convinced the risk is high, and the best way to deal with this environment is: embrace diversification.

Embrace Diversification

You might be familiar with my mantra of "diversification." My "Holy Grail" of investing is to strive to hold 15 good, uncorrelated, risk-balanced bets. In other words:

A sufficiently diversified portfolio of high-quality bets will outperform a single concentrated bet. It has a higher risk-adjusted return and can be engineered to achieve better returns at the same risk level. The more market risk is concentrated in one area, the more one should diversify; especially when the market is driven by a revolutionary new technology, because the technology itself brings immense uncertainty.

This is not an opinion; it is a mathematical certainty. For example, assume an investment has a risk/return ratio of 0.3 (6% return, 18% standard deviation, a common assumption for stocks); then, if I hold 5, 10, or 15 uncorrelated investments, I can reduce the risk (as measured by standard deviation) to 8%, 6%, and 5% respectively while keeping the 6% return. Therefore, by holding 15 good, uncorrelated bets, my risk/return ratio improves from 0.3 to 1.29, a 4.3x improvement. If desired, you can add leverage on top of that to achieve higher returns at the same risk level. This is a fact.

I have strong confidence in this. It stems from my backtesting, my actual returns over more than 50 years of investing, and the probabilistic logic within it: well-diversified bets, adjusted to fit personal risk tolerance, will, in the long run, yield much better returns than the concentrated bets most investors tend to hold. Specifically, through good diversification, you can achieve a higher risk-adjusted return than any concentrated bet; adjusting it to the risk level you are willing to bear yields a higher return at that target risk than any other approach.

Because I share this method, it is no longer my not-so-secret investing way. However, I rarely encounter investors who truly think about investment strategy this way. That is, I rarely meet people who truly think from a portfolio construction perspective—considering how a well-structured, diversified basket of bets performs differently from simply holding the stock of one great transformative industry company. Most are just thinking about whether those stocks and that industry will perform well and how to bet on them. Those who think about portfolio construction versus those who don't can end up with vastly different performance results. Therefore, I will share my views on this more comprehensively on another occasion.

For all these reasons, in the current environment, when thinking about how to play your hand, you should ask yourself: How concentrated should I be before diversifying?

Expected Returns Look Low

The high risk is undeniable. Next, I'll put forward a view that might prove to be wrong: expected future returns look low. My judgment about expected future returns comes from valuation-related analytical work and the readings from my bubble indicators: the real return on stocks over the next 5 to 10 years seems to be between -5% and -10%, although these numbers carry great uncertainty. In my view, these stocks are long-duration assets with high risk because it's hard to reliably see far into the future; they also appear overvalued and have an unstable holder base.

A question raised by the research team:

In a recent meeting, a member of my research team asked me: Why do you think the market's allocation today is incorrect? How do you know that the lack of diversification in today's market isn't for a good reason? For example, some investors believe AI stocks have very high expected returns; or that index concentration naturally happens when an industry makes up such a high percentage of total market cap; or that when an industry is in a frenzy, many investors buy the stocks without making a wise and reliable calculation of future earnings and how they should be reflected in the stock price.

My response:

Prices rise for various reasons, and not all of them are good. Some investors consider prices and push them higher because they believe the price is still attractive relative to fundamentals; some investors hold these stocks for the long term because they recognize it's a great new technology and see price increases as confirmation these are good stocks; and other investors hold index exposure, passively giving them a large weight in these stocks.

In my view, you can agonize over these issues to decide what you want to do; or you can realize that you don't need to agonize over this problem at all because you don't have enough information to bet confidently. You can simply say, "I don't know enough to bet confidently." And then not bet.

What gets people into trouble is thinking they must form a view and believing their view has value; but more likely, they cannot form a reliable, bettable view.

To be clear, I am not suggesting avoiding bets. Besides, you can't avoid betting because you have to put your money in some portfolio or cash. Most people think cash is the safest investment, but in the long run it is almost certainly the worst. My advice is that even if you have no tactical view on which markets are good or bad, you should know how to make good bets through diversification. Specifically, by holding a balanced strategic asset allocation portfolio and sticking to it when you have no tactical view you can bet on. But that's for another discussion.

So, I believe: Knowing what you don't know and deciding when not to bet is just as important as knowing what you do know and deciding when to bet.

In short, I subscribe to the following principle: because it's usually hard to know enough to justify a concentrated bet as rational, the best practice is to hold only diversified bets you have enough confidence in and that are uncorrelated with each other—i.e., an engineered portfolio designed to match your desired risk level. This is my "Holy Grail."

At this moment, given the current environment, I don't think anyone can see clearly enough what will happen next in this technology-driven market to make large concentrated bets. For me, avoiding concentration and maintaining diversification is the best way to deal with this "unknown." I know this is different from what you read in textbooks. Textbooks basically assume markets are efficient, so you should "believe the market."

In summary, the current market is unusually concentrated around a revolutionary new technology. This fact should remind us: not to confuse excitement about the new technology with whether those tech stocks are attractive, nor to abandon caution by holding a high-risk, highly correlated concentrated bet. Especially when, through clever diversification, we can achieve equally attractive returns at a much lower level of risk.

Postscript:

I won't share my specific holdings or tactical views with you because I don't want to be your investment advisor. But soon, I will share some key perspectives behind these views with you, including my bubble indicators and the logic behind them.

(Note: The above translation was completed with the assistance of DeepSeek. The content is for reference only.)

Link to the original article

热门币种推荐

相关问答

QAccording to Dalio, what are the 'five big forces' creating uncertainty in the current market environment?

AAccording to Dalio, the five big forces are: 1) The debt/money situation, 2) Political/social issues (which can significantly affect things like taxes), 3) Geopolitical factors (like wars), 4) Natural forces, and 5) New technologies developing.

QWhat is Dalio's central piece of investment advice for navigating the current AI-driven market, characterized by high concentration and uncertainty?

ADalio's central advice is to embrace diversification. He argues that a well-engineered, diversified portfolio of 15 or more high-quality, uncorrelated, and risk-balanced bets will provide a superior risk-adjusted return compared to a concentrated bet in a few leading tech/AI stocks.

QWhat is the key question investors should ask themselves when deciding how to 'play their hand' in the current market, as highlighted in the article?

AThe key question is: 'Before diversifying, how much concentration should I have?' This prompts investors to consciously decide their exposure level to the concentrated, high-flying tech sector relative to a diversified portfolio.

QWhy does Dalio believe that making large, concentrated bets on leading AI/tech companies at this stage is particularly risky?

ADalio believes it's risky because history shows that even the most revolutionary new tech companies experience major setbacks in similar early, euphoric phases. They face inherent uncertainties like over/under-investment, external shocks (monetary policy, wars), disruptive future technologies (e.g., quantum computing), and intense global competition (e.g., from China). Their future is highly unpredictable.

QWhat important principle does Dalio emphasize regarding when to make a bet versus when not to bet?

ADalio emphasizes that 'knowing what you don't know and deciding when not to bet is as important as knowing what you do know and deciding when to bet.' He suggests that often, investors lack sufficient information to make a confident, concentrated bet, and the rational choice is to acknowledge that and rely on strategic diversification instead.

你可能也喜欢

Joseph Chalom:以太坊正在成为全球金融的"信任结算层"

在2026年6月的VIP活动中,前贝莱德数字资产负责人、现Sharplink CEO Joseph Chalom发表了题为“金融市场的未来转型”的演讲,将其核心思想概括为“信任的工业化”。 Chalom指出,当前社会正处于“信任破裂”的Web2.5阶段,信息与身份的真实性难以保障。在传统金融体系中,建立和维护信任的成本极高,仅美国每年就耗费超过9.3万亿美元,且交易结算缓慢、系统碎片化。 他预测,未来将转向一个基于区块链和AI的新体系。以太坊凭借其超过100万个验证节点、十余年零宕机的记录以及巨大的链上资产规模,正在成为全球金融的“信任结算层”,为交易提供不可逆的最终确认。 这场转型由三大支柱加速驱动: 1. **稳定币**:将从进入加密市场的桥梁,演变为企业跨境支付和个人薪酬发放的高效轨道。 2. **代币化资产**:全球主要交易所和结算机构(如DTCC)正推动资产全天候交易,将引发自上世纪70年代以来的最大规模金融数字化变革。 3. **DeFi(去中心化金融)**:提供自动化、全天候的链上金融服务。 Chalom特别提出了可能改变游戏规则的**第四支柱——智能体金融(Agentic Finance)**。AI智能体将利用可编程的稳定币和智能合约,自主执行支付、投资等操作。他预计,到2027年底,每个人都可能拥有一个如“装在口袋里的CFO”般的AI数字分身,它能智能管理闲置资金、优化资产配置,实现“智能体对智能体”的高效交易。波士顿咨询集团估算,此类链上交易量可能在一年内增长千倍。 总之,金融业正迈向一个由以太坊结算层提供底层信任、由稳定币、代币化资产、DeFi及AI智能体共同重塑的全天候、可编程、高效率的未来。

marsbit11分钟前

Joseph Chalom:以太坊正在成为全球金融的"信任结算层"

marsbit11分钟前

交易

现货
合约

热门文章

如何购买S

欢迎来到HTX.com!我们已经让购买Sonic(S)变得简单而便捷。跟随我们的逐步指南,放心开始您的加密货币之旅。第一步:创建您的HTX账户使用您的电子邮件、手机号码注册一个免费账户在HTX上。体验无忧的注册过程并解锁所有平台功能。立即注册第二步:前往买币页面,选择您的支付方式信用卡/借记卡购买:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即时购买Sonic(S)。余额购买:使用您HTX账户余额中的资金进行无缝交易。第三方购买:探索诸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方法以增加便利性。C2C购买:在HTX平台上直接与其他用户交易。HTX场外交易台(OTC)购买:为大量交易者提供个性化服务和竞争性汇率。第三步:存储您的Sonic(S)购买完您的Sonic(S)后,将其存储在您的HTX账户钱包中。您也可以通过区块链转账将其发送到其他地方或者用于交易其他加密货币。第四步:交易Sonic(S)在HTX的现货市场轻松交易Sonic(S)。访问您的账户,选择您的交易对,执行您的交易,并实时监控。HTX为初学者和经验丰富的交易者提供了友好的用户体验。

2.6k人学过发布于 2025.01.15更新于 2026.06.02

如何购买S

相关讨论

欢迎来到HTX社区。在这里,您可以了解最新的平台发展动态并获得专业的市场意见。以下是用户对S(S)币价的意见。

活动图片