Billionaire Dalio issues two-word warning as shares sell off

If you’re an investor like me, you can’t be blamed for looking at last April’s returns and thinking things were all roses and daisies. After a scary tariff-induced 19% drop in the S&P 500, stocks rallied sharply from April lows. Nasdaq Comp and S&P 500 gained 50% and 36%respectively, in less than a year.

That’s impressive by any measure, but it probably created a problem.

Stocks are undoubtedly perfectly priced, even if trade wars erupted over the weekend amid new tariffs imposed on Europe. The rise in tensions over the past year is no surprise to the billionaire Ray Galiofounder of Bridgewater Associates, which manages 112 billion dollars in assets and is among the most successful hedge funds of all time.

Dalio has been beating the drum for the past year (I wrote more about it here ), arguing that the US mountain of debt is forcing a seismic shift in the global monetary order, prompting central banks to rethink their exposure to US debt against gold, the world’s second-largest reserve currency.

His concerns suggest an increasingly fragmented and distrustful global order, which he summed up in two words: “capital wars”.

These capital wars present real risks and consequences for investors.

Countess Jemal / Getty Images. · Countess Jemal / Getty Images.

The U.S. dollar’s reign as the world’s favorite reserve currency is under increasing pressure as trade wars discourage foreign central banks from buying U.S. debt, pushing Treasury yields higher.

“The monetary order is breaking down,” Dalio said in an interview with CNBC today. “Fiat currencies and debt as a store of wealth are not held by central banks in the same way.”

The fund manager buys and sells

Instead, central banks are rethinking their exposure as tensions and risks rise, causing even our allies to rethink their relationship with US bonds and the dollar.

“The biggest market that moved last year was the gold market,” Dalio continued. “At the other end of trade wars are capital wars.”

Gold prices are up in 2025, returning 66.2%, according to NYU Stern, far outpacing the S&P 500’s 17.8% return for the full year, including dividends. The trend continued in 2026 ETF SPDR Gold Shares (GLD). is up 10.3% year to dateincluding a Up 3.8% today following President Trump’s announcement of a new 10% tariff on European allies in an attempt to force support for his Greenland plans with NATO.

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