Customers at an Apple Store in the Chinese city of Kunming berated staff and demanded refunds on Friday after the shop was revealed to be an elaborate fake, sparking a media and Internet frenzy.
Long a target of counterfeiters and unauthorized resellers, Apple was alerted to the near flawless fake shop by an American blogger living in the southwestern city, more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) from the nearest genuine Apple stores in Beijing and Shanghai.
"When I heard the news I rushed here immediately to get the receipt, I am so upset," a customer surnamed Wang told Reuters, near tears. "With a store this big, it looks so believable who would have thought it was fake?"
Wang, a petite, 23-year-old office worker who would not give her first name, spent 14,000 yuan ($2,170) last month buying a Macbook Pro 13-inch and a 3G iPhone from the Kunming store. She wasn't issued a receipt at the time, with staff telling her to come back later.
"Where's my receipt, you promised me my receipt last month!" Wang shouted at employees, before being whisked away to an upstairs room.
Staff were also angry at the unwanted attention after more than 1,000 media outlets picked up the story and pictures of the store from the BirdAbroad blog.
"The media is painting us to be a fake store but we don't sell fakes, all our products are real, you can check it yourself," said one employee, who didn't want to give his name.
"There is no Chinese law that says I can't decorate my shop the way I want to decorate it."
Unwanted Attention
While upset at the coverage and unwilling to be fully identified, staff were cooperative when Reuters visited the store, answering questions and allowing the shop to be filmed.
Another employee, surnamed Yang, said business had been affected, with customers demanding they prove the authenticity of their products.
Apple has declined to comment on the fake store or others like it dotted around China. The Cupertino, California-based firm has just four genuine Apple Stores in Beijing and Shanghai and none in Kunming.
With about 3.2 million inhabitants, Kunming, the capital of the mountainous southwestern province of Yunnan, is small by Chinese standards and not well known in the West.
Located not far the borders of Laos, Vietnam and Myanmar, the city's fast-growing industrial and manufacturing base is emblematic of China's ascent on the world stage.
The fake Apple Store is situated along a crowded pedestrian-only shopping street, its black Apple logo gleaming.
Source: BirdAbroad
Inside, with its Apple posters on the walls and iPads and Macbook computers displayed on wooden tables, the store looks every bit like Apple Stores found all over the world but for some slightly shoddy workmanship and one or two errant details.
Not all customers were bothered by the revelations that the store was not the genuine article.
"As long as their products are real it's okay—after all, you enter a store not to look at anything except their products," said Hu Junkai, 18. "If the products you buy are real why do you care whether the store is a copy?"
Wang was not convinced.
"The biggest thing I'm upset about is that I spent so much money at this store and I don't even know whether it is real or not," she said.
"What can I do? They aren't going to give me a refund."
House Speaker John Boehner, refuting reports that he and President Obama were nearing a broad-based deficit accord, said Friday that "we're not even close to an agreement" but were continuing to seek a way to avert a US default.
At a news conference, Boehner said the House has "done its job" toward resolving the impasse over raising the government's debt limit and says it's time for the Senate to act.
The Senate, meanwhile, is moving to cast away House Republicans' budget-cutting plan, clearing the way for increasingly urgent talks over raising the nation's debt limit.
Obama and Boehner searched once more for an ambitious $4 trillion grand bargain, but officials said wide differences remained.
Less than two weeks from an Aug. 2 deadline that could precipitate a first-ever government default, the continuing Obama-Boehner talks kept alive the possibility of substantial deficit reduction that would combine cuts in spending on major benefit programs like Medicare and Medicaid and revenue increases through a broad overhaul of the tax code.
"We have the opportunity to do something big and meaningful," Obama declared in a newspaper opinion piece.
Later Friday, the president was taking his case to the public again in a town hall-style meeting. (CNBC.com will carry the even live)
From the Capitol, Boehner said House Republicans were prepared to compromise and prodded Obama: "The ball continues to be in the president's court."
Entering a Friday morning meeting of House Republicans, Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., was asked what the leadership's message to GOP members would be.
"We all stick together," he said.
Even as Republicans contended with the demands of tea party-backed House members, worry was shifting to how to keep Democrats in line if a compromise is reached between Boehner and Obama.
Talk of a deal prompted a spasm of distress among Senate Democrats worried that Obama would agree to immediate cuts but put off steps to increase tax revenues that the president has said are key to any agreement. The White House immediately sought to tamp down talk of an impending deal.
Democratic officials familiar with the talks said both the cuts to benefit programs such as Medicare and a tax overhaul are too complicated to undertake quickly and would have to wait up to a year to negotiate.
The officials, however, said any agreement would have to have strict requirements that would guarantee Congress had to act.
First, however, the Democratic-controlled Senate on Friday planned to dispense with a House-passed measure that would raise the debt limit by $2.4 trillion on the condition that Congress sends a constitutional balanced budget amendment to the states for ratification and approves trillions in long-term spending cuts.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the legislation "doesn't have one chance in a million of passing the Senate," and privately senior Republicans in both houses were anticipating its defeat.
That left bargaining for a bipartisan compromise as the only alternative.
Negotiations were proceeding on multiple fronts as officials searched for the clearest path to avoid a potentially devastating default. Each path faced sizable hurdles.
One short-term plan under discussion by some House Republicans would cut spending by $1 trillion or more immediately and raise the debt ceiling by a similar amount, permitting the government to borrow into early 2012.
But Obama has insisted on an increase that lasts into 2013, past next year's elections. That would require raising the debt ceiling by about $2.4 trillion.
White House spokesman Jay Carney said Thursday that Obama remains "unalterably opposed" to debt limit extensions in the order of six months, nine months or one year.
"His premise is that we have to raise the debt ceiling for an extended period of time into 2013 regardless," Carney said.
Another plan under discussion by Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., would guarantee that the president would get a debt ceiling increase through 2012.
It would extract a political price from Obama, who would have to ask Congress for three separate increments, and it would allow Republicans to avoid casting a difficult vote in favor of the debt ceiling that would anger their constituents.
Many House Republicans, however, were dismissive of the proposal because it did not guarantee deficit reductions.
Then there are the efforts by Obama and Boehner to close gaps on a deal to reduce deficits by about $4 trillion.
Democratic officials familiar with the discussions said both sides remained apart on key components of the deal, including the amount of revenue that a revamped tax code could yield, the nature of the changes to Medicare and Medicaid, and the process that would guarantee that both taxes and benefit programs would in fact be overhauled.
Republicans have insisted that entitlement programs such as Medicare need substantial changes, but have loudly objected to any revenue provision that could be deemed a tax increase.
Democrats, eager to keep changes to their cherished health care programs to a minimum, have demanded that any plan must have new tax revenue.
Democrats in the Senate reacted angrily when word spread that Obama and the House leaders appeared to be closing in on a deal that would include $3 trillion in spending cuts but only a promise of higher revenues to be realized through a comprehensive overhaul of the tax code.
White House officials went out of their way to deny that a deal was near.
By day's end Obama had asked the top four Democrats in the House and Senate to go to the White House to discuss the status of the talks. The meeting lasted one hour and 45 minutes.
In his opinion piece in USA Today, Obama said he was still insisting on tax revenue being part of the deal.
Democratic officials said that Obama was not demanding that specific tax provisions, such as restrictions on tax subsidies or closing loopholes, be agreed upon immediately, but that they could be part of a broader tax overhaul that Congress would have to undertake.
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., left the door open to such an approach to tax changes.
"I'd like to see it have a revenue piece so we have tax fairness, whether immediately or something that's part of an extended plan to it," she said Thursday.
The Democratic officials said the negotiations focus on immediate cuts to day-to-day operations of government that are financed at Congress' discretion.
The legislative work to cut entitlement programs such as Medicare and Medicaid and to overhaul the tax system would have to be carried out over the next six month to a year, the officials said.
One key sticking point, they said, was how to force Congress to address entitlement and tax changes to achieve the desired deficit reduction.
Under discussion were mechanisms that would trigger onerous tax and spending consequences if Congress tried to wiggle out.
Amid a likely moderation in industrial output, the government today lowered its GDP growth projection for 2011-12 to 8.6 per cent from the earlier estimate of about 9 per cent.
"Growth is estimated to be marginally higher at 8.6 per cent this year over 2010-11 levels of 8.5 per cent," the Finance Ministry said today.
The ministry added that as first quarter growth figures for the current fiscal are still to be released, the outlook for 2011-12 has to be inferred from movements of past data, as well as higher frequency proxy economic indicators.
While annual indicators of real GDP growth remained positive in 2010-11, there was a "perceptible slowdown" in terms of quarterly growth rates in the last two quarters.
The economy grew by just 8.3 per cent in the third quarter last fiscal and 7.8 per cent in the January-March period, the lowest in five quarters.
"This apparent slowdown in headline year-on-year growth rates on a quarterly basis, plus of movement in other higher frequency indicators... and slowing automobile sales, suggested that growth outlook for 2011-12 may be lower," it added.
While the Economic Survey had projected GDP expansion in FY'12 at 9 cent (plus, minus 0.25 per cent), the Reserve Bank later lowered it to 8 per cent.
The Indian economy is estimated to have expanded by 8.5 per cent in the last fiscal.
The ministry said there is a slowdown in corporate investment and their profits have been affected due to cost escalation of input items and raw material.
"Industry will probably slow, given trends in high frequency proxy indicators like Purchase Managers Index ( PMI )) and Index of Industrial Production ( IIP )) for the current fiscal (up to June, 2011)...," it said.
However, it hoped the industrial slowdown may reverse once the base effect wears off.
The industrial output growth rate dipped to a nine-month low of 5.6 per cent in May due to a poor showing by the manufacturing and mining sectors and lower offtake of capital goods.
On the agriculture front, the government expects that even though expansion would be "strong", the high base effect of last year would have an impact on the overall numbers.
As per the ministry, the agricultural growth rate may moderate to 3-4 per cent this fiscal from 5 per cent in 2010-11.
It further said barring finance, insurance, real estate and business services, the services sector is expected to witness strong quarterly growth.
The famous India Mauritius tax treaty has again been in the limelight. The spark causing the ignition this time is not any talk of revising the treaty but a recent ruling of the Bombay High Court (HC).
A typical PE structure, in the Indian context, would comprise of investment vehicles residing in Mauritius. In this recent ruling, the view taken by the Court is purely based on facts and hence there may not be an immediate cause for panic. However, the lesson learnt from the ruling is that the transaction documents need to be tightly weaved without there being any loose ends resulting in unexpected or multiple interpretation. This does necessitate a need to review documents of all transactions.
The Court has upheld the proceedings initiated by the tax department with the intention of denying India-Mauritius treaty benefits as well as to levy tax on 'indirect' transfer. The HC held that prima facie, the transactions under the two Sale and Purchase Agreements were basically transactions to transfer the entire right, title and interest in the Indian company viz. Idea Cellular, India ('ICL India') by one joint venture partner in the USA to the remaining two Indian joint venture partners.
India-Mauritius Tax Treaty Benefit
On the issue of applicability of India- Mauritius tax treaty ('Treaty'), the HC held on facts that AT&T Mauritius cannot be said to be the beneficial owner of shares of ICL India and accordingly provisions of the Treaty would not apply to the transaction of sale of shares of ICL India by AT&T Mauritius to one of the India joint venture partner.
While this decision seems to have raised fresh debate on the availability of capital gains tax benefit under the treaty, it has to be recognized that the decision is an interim view rendered purely based on the facts of the case. The HC rejected the applicability of treaty provisions on the ground that AT&T Mauritius was holding shares in ICL India on behalf of AT&T USA. In arriving at this conclusion, the HC relied on the terms of the Joint Venture Agreement ('JVA') between the shareholders and held that shares of ICL India were in the name of AT&T Mauritius only as a permitted transferee of AT&T USA under the JVA and such allotment of shares did not confer any beneficial ownership to AT&T Mauritius. In fact, the HC even refused to accept that AT&T Mauritius could be said to be the legal owner of the shares since the JVA gave this right to AT&T USA.
In light of the above, the HC held that Circular 789 (allowing benefits of India- Mauritius tax treaty on the basis of a Tax Residency Certificate) and the decision of the Apex Court in the case of Azadi Bachao Andolan (which upheld the validity of Circular 789) would not apply to the facts of this case.
We may point out that this is not the first time that an Indian Court has addressed the question of beneficial ownership for granting tax treaty benefits. In an earlier ruling, the Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) had rejected the tax department's contention and held on facts that KSPG Netherlands Holding B.V was the beneficial owner of the Indian entity and entitled to the India-Netherlands tax treaty benefits.
The Indian tax department has recently filed a special leave petition to the Supreme Court challenging one such ruling passed by the AAR.
Taxation Of 'Indirect' Transfers
Besides rejecting the treaty benefits to AT&T Mauritius, the HC also held that the transaction under which another Indian JV partner acquired shares of AT&T Mauritius from the JV partner in the US was also prima facie liable to tax in India. Based on the transaction documents, the HC observed that the real objective of acquiring shares in AT&T Mauritius was to purchase shares of ICL, India and not of AT&T Mauritius.
Taxation of 'indirect' transfers in India has been a matter of lot of controversy in recent past. The tax department questioned the taxability of such indirect transfers for the first time in the Vodafone case which is currently being litigated. The proposed Direct Tax Code (DTC) also points to tax such indirect transfers in certain situations. However, even on this issue, the HC has laid a lot of emphasis on the terms of shareholder agreements to arrive at the real intention of the parties.
To conclude, the proceedings will take its course and the parties will have the right to appeal on merits of the case. However, the judgment reaffirms an important principle that shareholder agreements and other transaction agreements are vital documents for demonstrating the real intention of the parties and due regard should be given to these agreements while evaluating the tax implications.
This is interesting 51 pager report Don't know how true this is. Read at your own risk
http://www.veritascorp.com/_files/file.php?fileid=newsLYGdatQHHU&filename=file_Reliance_Industries_Ltd._and_Reliance_Communications_Ltd._July_18_2011_Veritas_Part_2.pdf
Mastering the Machine
How Ray Dalio built the world's richest and strangest hedge fund.
Ray Dalio has an uncanny ability to anticipate economic trends. Critics say that he runs a cult.
Ray Dalio, the sixty-one-year-old founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world's biggest hedge fund, is tall and somewhat gaunt, with an expressive, lined face, gray-blue eyes, and longish gray hair that he parts on the left side. When I met him earlier this year at his office, on the outskirts of Westport, Connecticut, he was wearing an open-necked blue shirt, gray corduroy pants, and black leather boots. He looked a bit like an aging member of a British progressive-rock group. After a few pleasantries, he grabbed a thick briefing book and shepherded me into a large conference room, where his firm was holding what he described as its weekly "What's going on in the world?" meeting.
Of the fifty or so people present, most were clean-cut men in their twenties or thirties. Dalio sat down near the front of the room. A colleague began describing how the European Central Bank had just bought some Greek bonds from investors at a discount to their face value—a move that the speaker described as a possible precursor to an over-all restructuring of Greece's vast debts. Dalio interrupted him. He said, "Here's where you are being imprecise," and then explained at length what a proper debt restructuring would entail, dismissing the E.C.B.'s move as an exercise in "kicking it down the road."
Dalio is a "macro" investor, which means that he bets mainly on economic trends, such as changes in exchange rates, inflation, and G.D.P. growth. In search of profitable opportunities, Bridgewater buys and sells more than a hundred different financial instruments around the world—from Japanese bonds to copper futures traded in London to Brazilian currency contracts—which explains why it keeps a close eye on Greece. In 2007, Dalio predicted that the housing-and-lending boom would end badly. Later that year, he warned the Bush Administration that many of the world's largest banks were on the verge of insolvency. In 2008, a disastrous year for many of Bridgewater's rivals, the firm's flagship Pure Alpha fund rose in value by nine and a half per cent after accounting for fees. Last year, the Pure Alpha fund rose forty-five per cent, the highest return of any big hedge fund. This year, it is again doing very well.
The discussion in the conference room moved on to Spain, the United Kingdom, and China, where, during the previous week, the central bank had raised interest rates in an attempt to slow inflation. Dalio said that the Chinese economy was in danger of overheating, and somebody asked how a Chinese slowdown would affect the price of oil and other commodities. Greg Jensen, Bridgewater's co-chief executive and co-chief investment officer, who is thirty-six, said he thought that even a stuttering China would still grow fast enough to push world commodity prices upward.
Dalio asked for another opinion. From the back of the room, a young man dressed in a black sweatshirt started saying that a Chinese slowdown could have a big effect on global supply and demand. Dalio cut him off: "Are you going to answer me knowledgeably or are you going to give me a guess?" The young man, whom I will call Jack, said he would hazard an educated guess. "Don't do that," Dalio said. He went on, "You have a tendency to do this. . . . We've talked about this before." After an awkward silence, Jack tried to defend himself, saying that he thought he had been asked to give his views. Dalio didn't let up. Eventually, the young employee said that he would go away and do some careful calculations.
After the meeting, Dalio told me that the exchange had been typical for Bridgewater, where he encourages people to challenge one another's views, regardless of rank, in what he calls a culture of "radical transparency." Dalio had no qualms about upbraiding a junior employee in front of me and dozens of his colleagues. When confusions arise, he said, it is important to discuss them openly, even if that involves publicly pointing out people's mistakes—a process he referred to as "getting in synch." He added, "I believe that the biggest problem that humanity faces is an ego sensitivity to finding out whether one is right or wrong and identifying what one's strengths and weaknesses are."
Dalio is rich—preposterously rich. Last year alone, he earned between two and three billion dollars, and reached No. 55 on the Forbes 400 list. But what distinguishes him more from other hedge-fund managers is the depth of his economic analysis and the pretensions of his intellectual ambition. He is very keen to be seen as something more than a billionaire trader. Indeed, like his sometime rival George Soros, he appears to aspire to the role of worldly philosopher. In October, 2008, at the height of the financial crisis, he circulated a twenty-page essay immodestly titled "A Template for Understanding What's Going On," which said the economy faced not just a common recession but a "deleveraging"—a period in which people cut back on borrowing and rebuild their savings—the impact of which would be felt for a generation. This line of analysis wasn't unique to Dalio, but almost three years later, with economic growth stagnating again, it does not seem off the mark.
Many hedge-fund managers stay pinned to their computer screens day and night monitoring movements in the markets. Dalio is different. He spends most of his time trying to figure out how economic and financial events fit together in a coherent framework. "Almost everything is like a machine," he told me one day when he was rambling on, as he often does. "Nature is a machine. The family is a machine. The life cycle is like a machine." His constant goal, he said, was to understand how the economic machine works. "And then everything else I basically view as just a case at hand. So how does the machine work that you have a financial crisis? How does deleveraging work—what is the nature of that machine? And what is human nature, and how do you raise a community of people to run a business?"
Dalio is serenely convinced that the precepts he relies on in the markets can be applied to other aspects of life, such as career development and management. And he has enough regard for his own views on these subjects to have collected them in print. Before our meeting, he sent me a copy of his "Principles," a hundred-page text that is required reading for Bridgewater's new hires. It turned out to be partly a self-help book, partly a management manual, and partly a treatise on the principles of natural selection as they apply to business. "I believe that all successful people operate by principles that help them be successful," a passage on the second page said. The text was organized into three sections: "5 Steps to Personal Evolution," "10 Steps to Personal Decision-Making," and "Management Principles." The last of the two hundred and seventy-seven management principles was: "Constantly worry about what you are missing. Even if you acknowledge you are a 'dumb shit' and are following the principles and are designing around your weaknesses, understand that you might still be missing things. You will be better and be safer this way."
Dalio's philosophy has created a workplace that some call creepy. Last year, Dealbreaker, a Wall Street Web site, picked up a copy of the Principles and made fun of a section in which Dalio appeared to compare Bridgewater to a pack of hyenas feeding on a young wildebeest. In March, AR, a magazine that covers hedge funds, quoted a former colleague of Dalio's saying, "Bridgewater is a cult. It's isolated, it has a charismatic leader and it has its own dogma." The authors of the article noted that Dalio's "emphasis on tearing down an individual's ego hints at the so-called struggle groups of Maoism," while his search for "human perfection devoid of emotion resembles the fantasy world in Ayn Rand's 'The Fountainhead.'"
Dalio doesn't pretend that Bridgewater is a typical workplace, but he is sensitive to criticism. The recent media attention irked him, because, in his view, it misrepresented and trivialized Bridgewater's culture, which he insists is central to the firm's success. "It is why we made money for our clients during the financial crisis when most others went over the cliff," he wrote to me in an e-mail. "Our greatest power is that we know that we don't know and we are open to being wrong and learning."
After the "What's going on in the world?" meeting, he walked back to his office, an airy but modest-sized corner space that overlooks the Saugatuck River and is lined with pictures of his wife and four sons. He sat down behind his desk and showed me a book he had been reading—"Einstein's Mistakes: The Human Failings of Genius," by Hans C. Ohanian. "Here was the greatest mind of the twentieth century, and he made lots of mistakes," Dalio said. In his Principles, Dalio declares that acknowledging errors, studying them, and learning from them is the key to success. He writes, "Pain + Reflection = Progress." Bridgewater puts this equation into action by organizing lengthy assessment sessions, in which employees must discuss their mistakes.
The next item on Dalio's agenda was a meeting with his two co-chief executives: Jensen and David McCormick, a former senior official in the Treasury Department under George W. Bush. Like virtually all meetings at Bridgewater, this one was taped. Dalio says that the tapes—some audio, some video—provide an objective record of what has been said; they can be used for training purposes, and they allow Bridgewater's employees to keep up with what is going on at the firm, including his discussions with senior colleagues. "They get to see all of my mistakes," Dalio told me. "They get to see all of my humanity."
Once a tape recorder had been switched on, Jensen, McCormick, and Dalio discussed the possible promotion of an internal candidate to a senior-management role. McCormick, a soft-spoken forty-five-year-old who studied engineering at West Point, argued that the candidate's prior experience at a big Wall Street firm indicated that he could probably do the job. Dalio disagreed. An investment bank is a "totally different world," he said. But, rather than continue the discussion, he asked one of his assistants to call in the candidate. One rule of radical transparency is that Bridgewater employees refrain from saying behind a person's back anything that they wouldn't say to his face.
The man arrived and stood before Dalio's desk. Dalio explained what the discussion was about and said, "I don't imagine that you would be a good fit for the job." The man took a seat, and Dalio and McCormick continued their discussion about his qualifications. The candidate explained his experience on Wall Street and said he thought he could do the job well. Dalio leaned back in his chair, looking skeptical. The employee didn't get the promotion.
The only child of Italian-American parents, Ray Dalio was born in Jackson Heights, Queens, in 1949. His father was a jazz musician who played the clarinet and saxophone at Manhattan jazz clubs such as the Copacabana; his mother was a homemaker. When Dalio was eight, the family bought a three-bedroom house in Manhasset, and enrolled Ray in the local public school. "I was a bad student," he recalls. "I have a bad rote memory, and I didn't like studying." From the age of twelve, Dalio caddied at the nearby Links Golf Club, whose members included many Wall Street investors. Some of them gave Dalio tips. The first stock he purchased was Northeastern Airlines, which soon received a takeover offer. Its shares tripled. "I figured that this was an easy game," Dalio said. By the time he started college, at a nearby campus of Long Island University, he had built up a stock portfolio worth several thousand dollars.
After signing up for some finance classes, he discovered that there were some topics he enjoyed studying. Transcendental meditation, which he took up following a trip to India by the Beatles, also helped his work habits. Most mornings before going to the office, he still meditates. Demonstrating his technique, he sat back in his office chair, closed his eyes, and clasped his hands in front of him. "It's just a mental exercise in which you are clearing your mind," he said. "Creativity comes from open-mindedness and centeredness—seeing things in a nonemotionally charged way."
After graduating, Dalio went to Harvard Business School, where he traded commodities—grains, oil, cotton, and so on—for his own account. Not long after leaving Harvard, he landed at Shearson Hayden Stone, the brokerage firm run by Sanford Weill. Dalio worked in the commodity-futures department, advising cattle ranchers, grain producers, and others on how to hedge risks. (The horns of a longhorn steer, the gift of some California ranchers, are mounted behind his desk.) On New Year's Eve in 1974, Dalio went out drinking with his departmental boss, got into a disagreement, and slugged him. About the same time, at the annual convention of the California Food & Grain Growers' Association, he paid an exotic dancer to drop her cloak in front of the crowd. After being fired, he persuaded some of his clients to hire him as a consultant and founded Bridgewater, operating it out of his two-bedroom apartment. He was twenty-six years old.
By the early nineteen-eighties, Dalio had got married, started a family, and moved to Wilton, Connecticut, where he lived and traded out of a converted barn. He also advised businesses on how to manage risk and published an economic newsletter. One of his readers was Bob Prince, a young financial analyst who worked for a bank in Oklahoma, and who is now Bridgewater's co-chief investment officer. Prince showed one of Dalio's articles to his boss, David Moffett, who went on to become the chief executive of Freddie Mac. "He said it was the best thing he had ever read on how the economy works," Prince recalled. Another of Dalio's articles that stuck in Prince's memory was titled "What Is a Jeweler?" It described a jeweller as basically an investor with a long position in gold and precious stones. If the market price of these commodities goes up, the jeweller makes money on his stock. If prices fall, he can lose out. To limit the risk, Dalio wrote that jewellers should purchase gold-futures contracts designed to rise in value when the price of gold falls.
In 1985, Dalio persuaded the World Bank's employee-retirement fund to let Bridgewater manage some of its capital. In 1989, Kodak's retirement system did the same. At the time, Kodak had most of its money invested in stocks. Dalio's pitch, which hasn't changed much over the years, was that by investing in a variety of other markets, such as U.S. and international bonds, and using leverage to bolster its exposure, Bridgewater could match or beat the stock market with less risk. "He had a new way of thinking," Rusty Olson, who ran Kodak's retirement funds for many years, told me. "You get the same return, but you get a heck of a lot of beneficial diversification, too."
Hedge funds date to 1949, when Alfred Winslow Jones, a writer at Fortune, opened a private investment firm using sixty thousand dollars he had raised from friends and forty thousand he had saved. To boost his returns, Jones borrowed heavily and bought stocks he liked "on margin"—a practice that had been discredited in the late nineteen-twenties. As a "hedge" against the market falling, Jones also picked out some stocks he believed to be overvalued and bet against them—a practice known as "selling short." Jones's fund regularly beat the Dow, and by the late nineteen-sixties it had attracted many imitators.
Worldwide, there are now some ten thousand hedge funds, which the government regulates only loosely. Together, they have about two trillion dollars under management. Even today, they employ the two basic tools that Jones used—borrowing ("leverage") and selling short—and they charge their clients hefty fees, as Jones did. On top of a two-per-cent management fee, they deduct twenty per cent of any investment gains they generate. Jones claimed that this remuneration scheme, which is known as "two and twenty," was inspired by the way ancient Phoenician merchants financed their trading expeditions. But the practice is also tax-driven. It allows hedge-fund managers to classify much of their income as capital gains, which are taxed at a far lower rate than regular income. While cops and schoolteachers face a marginal tax rate of twenty-five per cent, hedge-fund managers like Dalio have for years paid fifteen per cent on the lion's share of their income.
Some hedge-fund managers, such as Steven A. Cohen, of S.A.C. Capital, and David Einhorn, of Greenlight Capital, are stock pickers, like Jones. Others, such as James Simons, of Renaissance Technologies, are known as "quants." They use computers to sift through market data, spot profitable opportunities, and place trades, all with minimal human intervention. As a macro trader, Dalio is working in the tradition of George Soros and Julian Robertson, famous speculators who ranged across markets.
Bridgewater has long run two primary investment funds. One, called All Weather, has low charges attached to it and seeks to match the over-all market return, which is known as "beta," in whichever market the client chooses. Another, Pure Alpha, which has the standard two-and-twenty charges, aims at beating the market return but also at limiting risk. To investment professionals, "alpha" is the return over and above the market return. If in a given year the S. & P. 500 returns fifteen per cent and an equity-fund manager generates a return of twenty per cent, his alpha is five per cent.
Part of Dalio's innovation has been to build a hedge fund that caters principally to institutional investors rather than to rich individuals. Of the roughly one hundred billion dollars invested in Bridgewater, only a small proportion comes from wealthy families. Almost a third comes from public pension funds, such as the Pennsylvania Public School Employees' Retirement System; another third comes from corporate pension funds, such as those at Kodak and General Motors; a quarter comes from government-run sovereign wealth funds, such as the Government Investment Corporation of Singapore. "Making money on a constant basis is the holy grail, and Ray and Bridgewater have done that," Ng Kok-Song, the chief investment officer of the Singapore fund, told me. "They are consistently innovating—constantly soul-searching and asking, 'Have we got this right?' " Kok-Song went on, "I am constantly asking myself, 'If Bridgewater is doing this, shouldn't we be doing the same thing?' "
At some hedge funds, client service is an afterthought. Bridgewater's investors receive a daily newsletter, monthly performance updates, quarterly reviews, and conference-call briefings from Dalio and other senior executives. "When a lot of folks were very, very secretive, Ray could see the value in creating something that was more open, something that was attractive to very large streams of money," Robert Johnson, a former senior executive at Soros Fund Management, who now runs the Institute for New Economic Thinking, said to me.
Recently, the hedge-fund industry has been shaken by allegations that it exploits inside information. In May, Raj Rajaratnam, the founder of the Galleon Group, was convicted on fourteen counts of conspiracy and securities fraud. Other government investigations are continuing, including one involving S.A.C. Capital. Dalio and Bridgewater don't appear to be involved. Dalio told me that Bridgewater hasn't received any subpoenas, adding that he had no reason to believe that the firm was under investigation by any official agency.
Dalio is an outdoorsman and naturalist of the Hemingway school: he likes to go places and kill things. He fishes in Canada, shoots grouse in Scotland, and hunts big game in Africa, with a bow—particularly Cape buffalo, which weigh up to two thousand pounds, are famously ornery, and sometimes gore hunters with their giant horns. Naturally, Dalio sees this as a metaphor for how he invests. "It's always a matter of controlling risk," he explained. "Risky things are not in themselves risky if you understand them and control them. If you do it randomly and you are sloppy about it, it can be very risky." The key to success, he said, is figuring out "Where is the edge? And how do I stay the right distance from the edge?"
One way he does it is by spreading his bets: at any given time, the Pure Alpha fund typically has in place about thirty or forty different trades. "I'm always trying to figure out my probability of knowing," Dalio said. "Given that I'm never sure, I don't want to have any concentrated bets." Such thinking runs counter to the conventional wisdom in the hedge-fund industry, which is that the only way to score big is to bet the house. George Soros famously did this in 1992—selling short some ten billion dollars' worth of sterling. A few years ago, John Paulson wagered hugely against U.S. mortgage bonds and made several billion dollars.
Dalio is a consistent hitter of singles and doubles—the José Reyes of Wall Street. Among the bets the Pure Alpha fund placed last year were long positions in Treasury bonds, the Japanese yen, and gold, and short positions in the euro and European sovereign debt. A potential problem with this type of global investing is that these days many markets move in the same direction, which makes it hard to achieve real diversification. Bridgewater's solution is to place a lot of "spread" bets, purchasing one security it considers undervalued and selling short another one it considers overvalued. For example, it might buy platinum and sell silver, or buy a thirty-year U.K. bond and sell a ten-year bond. The returns from spread bets tend to be uncorrelated with the over-all market.
Other hedge funds have tried to mimic Dalio's approach, which is sometimes referred to as "portable alpha," but none have proved as successful. The strategy depends on an ability to outperform the market consistently, which many economists regard as virtually impossible. Dalio somehow seems to manage it.
His warnings ignored in Washington, Dalio issued more jeremiads to his clients. "If the economy goes down, it will not be a typical recession," his newsletter said in January, 2008. Rather, it would be a disaster in which "the financial deleveraging causes a financial crisis that causes an economic crisis. . . . This continues until there is a reflation, a currency devaluation and government guarantees of the efficacy of key financial intermediaries." As the crisis deepened, Dalio continued to assess it far more accurately than many senior policymakers did. When the government allowed Lehman Brothers to collapse, he despaired. "So, now we sit and wait to see if they have some hidden trick up their sleeves, or if they really are as reckless as they seem," the newsletter said on September 15, 2008.
Eventually, after the near implosion of the financial system had brought about a deep recession, some policymakers came to respect Dalio's analysis. "I think the central policy judgment was that there was more risk in doing too little than in doing too much," Lawrence Summers, who headed the National Economic Council between 2009 and 2010, recalled. "That was a judgment I reached, and it was a judgment Ray reached." While Summers was in the White House, he read Bridgewater's economic newsletter and spoke every few months with Dalio, whom he described to me as "an impressively intellectually aggressive guy." Summers went on, "He had a fully articulated way of looking at the economy. I'm not sure I would agree with all of it, but it seems to have been a very powerful analytical tool through this particular period."
And a powerful investment tool, too. Anticipating that the Federal Reserve would be forced to print a lot of money to revive the economy, Bridgewater placed a number of bets that would pay off in such a scenario—for instance, going long Treasury bonds, shorting the dollar, and buying gold and other commodities. These trades helped the Pure Alpha fund make money in 2008, but Dalio's bearishness cost him in 2009. Despite the Fed's actions and the Obama Administration's stimulus package, Dalio predicted that the economic recovery would be weak. When growth rebounded faster than he expected and the Dow rose nineteen per cent, the Pure Alpha fund gained just four per cent. But last year, when G.D.P. growth faltered, the fund made a great deal of money betting on Treasury bonds and other securities that tend to do well in a weak economy.
In April, an article in New York ridiculed Dalio's Principles, saying that they read "as if Ayn Rand and Deepak Chopra had collaborated on a line of fortune cookies." It also accused him of running Bridgewater like a cult. "I've been surprised that there's been so much controversy about us having such clearly set-out principles, especially since they're all about being truthful and transparent to do good work and have meaningful relationships," Dalio wrote to me subsequently. "Most of the people who don't like us having them haven't read them—they just assume that us having a lot of principles makes us a cult. That's O.K. I figure that the people who matter to us will take the time to read them and form their own opinions and those who don't care enough to read them don't matter to us."
Dalio may protest too much. The word "cult" clearly has connotations that don't apply to an enterprise staffed by highly paid employees who can quit at any moment. But Bridgewater's headquarters are in the woods, isolated from any other financial institution; Dalio is a strong-willed leader; and the employees do use their own vocabulary—Dalio's vocabulary. Bob Elliott, a twenty-nine-year-old Harvard graduate who has worked at Bridgewater for six years, told me earnestly, "Once you understand how the machine works, you have the ability to take that and study and apply it across markets." It's also the case that in the time I spent at the firm I saw senior people criticizing subordinates—but not the reverse.
In his Principles, Dalio acknowledged that his firm can seem strange to outsiders and newcomers: "Since Bridgewater's culture is very different from what is typical in the world at large, people often encounter culture shock when they start here." In part to minimize this shock, for years Bridgewater recruited young men and women straight out of college. (Harvard, Princeton, and Dartmouth were favorite targets.) But the firm's in-your-face attitude—and the relentless pressure to perform—takes its toll. "We get a lot of people who self-select out of that pretty quickly," Michael Partington, a recruiter at Bridgewater, said to me. Within two years of arriving at Bridgewater, about a quarter of new hires have quit or been let go.
Bridgewater has been expanding rapidly—it now has more than a thousand people on its payroll—and it has brought in a lot of mid-career executives. One day, I drove to Westport and sat in on a management-committee meeting, which had been set up for the purpose of "getting in synch" with a recent recruit, whom I'll call Peter and who had come from a big financial firm. All nine members of Bridgewater's management committee were sitting at a long wooden conference table. Peter, a lean man with fair hair, sat stiffly near the front: he looked like somebody anticipating a root canal. Jensen and McCormick were nominally in charge, but Dalio took over, telling Peter that, during a previous management meeting, he had answered emotionally in response to questioning from Jensen. "This is a common thing when somebody's getting probed," Dalio said. "Because the amygdala gets stimulated and you have that emotional reaction." Peter agreed that he had become upset, especially when he sensed he was being accused of misleading his colleagues. "I felt in some sense my integrity was being attacked," he said. "That's when things spiralled out of control."
Dalio walked to the front of the room, where he wrote on a whiteboard, "FELT," "INTEGRITY," and "MISLED." "?'Felt' is the key word here . . . and it's a challenge for people," he said. After a bit more discussion, he went on, "What we're trying to have is a place where there are no ego barriers, no emotional reactions to mistakes. . . . If we could eliminate all those reactions, we'd learn so much faster." Another member of the committee, Eileen Murray, intervened to say she assumed that Peter had not encountered this type of conversation at his previous job. He confirmed that he hadn't. Murray nodded sympathetically. "When I first came here, I was like, 'What the hell is going on?' " she said.
Dalio wasn't finished. He suggested that the problem was that Peter had an idea of how things should be handled, and when the reality turned out to be different he hadn't been honest with his colleagues. "The issue is that you are not freely releasing those beliefs," he said to Peter. "Unlike a lot of companies, where you are meant to sit there and be quiet . . . here we respect your notion that you have a point of view. . . . Your responsibility is to say, 'Does it make sense to me?' And if it doesn't make sense don't keep it bottled up." Dalio went on, "I'm saying, just let it flow, man."
Peter said he thought it was understandable that somebody new to the firm would react under stress as he had. Still, he added, "If I had to replay this thing again, I'd be much more open with my thoughts."
"What would you say the duty of a leader is?" Dalio asked him.
Peter replied, "The duty of a leader, first and foremost, is to be transparent."
Bridgewater's decision rules surely contribute to his firm's success. But Dalio also believes that his management principles play a role. "What is a typical organization?" he asked me one day. "A typical organization is one where people are walking around saying, 'This is stupid, this doesn't make sense,' behind each other's backs." In support of his management theories, Dalio has an expert witness. "About eighty-five per cent of what's in the Principles could be documented and supported by research," Bob Eichinger, an organizational psychologist who has done consulting work for Bridgewater and other large companies, said. Eichinger went on, "Is it a better way to run a company? From a results perspective, probably so. Could a large portion of the working population be comfortable in that environment? Probably not."
Some senior executives at Bridgewater do relish working there. Eileen Murray, who runs the firm's accounting and technology systems, is one of them. Before moving to Bridgewater, in 2009, she spent twenty-five years on Wall Street, rising to a senior post at Morgan Stanley. "I wanted to make sure I wasn't joining some petri dish in Westport, Connecticut, as part of a big experiment," she said, recalling her initial, lengthy conversations with Dalio. "If someone's intention is to make me a better person, I really appreciate that. If people do things because they can, or because they are the boss . . . I don't react to that well." Murray said she is now reassured, because "the intention is to make people better. . . . I have never seen a C.E.O. spend as much time developing his people as Ray."
Another new member of Bridgewater's management committee is James Comey, the firm's top lawyer, who served as Deputy Attorney General in the Bush Administration between 2003 and 2005. "Most of my friends think I am having a midlife crisis," Comey told me in a recent phone conversation, referring to his decision, last year, to leave Lockheed Martin and accept an offer from Dalio. He was tired of corporate politics and craved a setting where people spoke truth to power, but, he said, it took him a while to get used to dealing with Dalio. "When Ray sent me an e-mail saying, 'I think what you said today doesn't make sense,' I tended to think, What does he really mean? Where's he coming from? And what is my play? Who are my allies? All of the things you think about in the outside world. It took me three months to realize that when Ray says, 'I think you are wrong,' he really means 'I think you are wrong.' He's not trying to provoke you, or anything else."
Comey was initially struck by how long it took Bridgewater to make decisions, because of the ceaseless internal debates. "I said, 'Lordy, we have to put tops on bottoms. Let's get something done,' " Comey recalled. But he added, laughing, "The mind control is working. I've come to believe that all the probing actually reduces inefficiencies over the long run, because it prevents bad decisions from being made." Comey said of Dalio, "He's tough and he's demanding and sometimes he talks too much, but, God, is he a smart bastard."
And yet Dalio's acuity prompts an awkward question: how much of Bridgewater's success comes not from the way it is organized, or any notion of "radical transparency," but from the boss's raw investment abilities? At other hedge funds, it is taken for granted that the firm's principal asset walks out the door every evening and settles into a chauffeur-driven car. Is Bridgewater really any different? Although the firm trades in more than a hundred markets, it is widely believed that the great bulk of its profit comes from two areas in which Dalio is an expert: the bond and currency markets of major industrial countries. Unlike some other hedge funds, Bridgewater has never made much money in the U.S. stock market, an area where Dalio has less experience. "Bridgewater really is Ray," one former employee told me. "The key decisions they have made—where they have really made their money—is Ray. Most of what really matters is Ray, with help from Greg and Bob. You could run the firm with forty or fifty people instead of a thousand, and it would be basically the same."
As long as Dalio remains healthy, the fact that he plays a key role in directing Bridgewater's investments isn't an issue. (Based on past experience, it is a big advantage.) But, from a business and marketing perspective, the suggestion that Bridgewater's success continues to hinge on Dalio is a problematic one. As the former employee explained, "It's hard to market that model—one guy and his brilliant track record. If you want to sell your firm to institutional clients, it's critical to appear to be 'rule-driven.' That takes a lot of smarts. Most people want to take the credit. To say 'I just run this machine' detracts from your own individual brilliance. But that is very smart business."
Dalio contests this account. He insists that he is but one member of a large team, with Greg Jensen and Bob Prince acting as his co-chief investment officers. He compares the comments of former employees to the carping of ex-spouses. In fact, with the firm prospering, Dalio has been living up to a promise to spend a bit more time away from it, and he has ceded some day-to-day management responsibility to Jensen and McCormick. "I'm stepping back a little: I'm going to a minister/mentor role," Dalio said, comparing himself to Lee Kuan Yew, the longtime Prime Minister of Singapore, who relinquished his post in 1990 but even today retains great influence. This month, Dalio is formally giving up his co-C.E.O. title in favor of "Mentor."
The managerial changes and Dalio's lean appearance have ignited some speculation that he is sick, but he insisted to me that he is fine. He said his weight loss was the result of an "intended weight-loss program," and he said he has absolutely no intention of giving up his role in directing Bridgewater's investments. In stepping back from day-to-day management and in bringing in senior people, he said he is seeking to preserve the essence of the firm he built while preparing it for his eventual departure. Bridgewater has grown so large that its two main funds are now closed to new investors. Recently it launched a third fund, which is called Pure Alpha Major Markets.
Last year, Dalio sold about twenty per cent of Bridgewater to some of its employees in a deal financed by several of the firm's longtime clients, and he told me that ultimately he would like to sell his entire ownership stake to his colleagues. Unlike certain other hedge-fund managers, though, he has no interest in making another fortune by floating his firm on the stock market. "I don't want Bridgewater to go public or have it controlled by anybody outside the firm," he said. "I think people who do that tend to mess up the firm."
Dalio insists that money has never been his main motivation. He lives well, but avoids the conspicuous consumption that some of his rivals indulge in. He and his wife, Barbara, to whom he has been married for thirty-four years, own two houses, one in Greenwich, Connecticut, and one in Greenwich Village, which he sometimes uses on weekends. (They are currently building a new house on the water in Connecticut.) Apart from hunting and exploring remote areas, Dalio's main hobby is music: jazz, blues, and rock and roll. Recently, he joined a philanthropic campaign started by Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, pledging to give away at least half of his money. (Forbes estimates his net worth at six billion dollars.) He and his wife wrote in a public letter, "We learned that beyond having enough money to help secure the basics—quality relationships, health, stimulating ideas, etc.—having more money, while nice, wasn't all that important."
Not that Dalio makes any apology for his fortune or his profession. An agnostic and a self-described "hyperrealist," he regards it as self-evident that all social systems obey nature's laws, and that individual participants get rewarded or punished according to how far they operate in harmony with those laws. He views the financial markets as simply another social system, which determines payoffs and punishments in a like manner. "You have to be accurate," he says. "Otherwise, you are going to pay. Alpha is zero sum. In order to earn more than the market return, you have to take money from somebody else."
Dalio is right, but somewhat self-serving. If hedge-fund managers are playing a zero-sum game, what is their social utility? And if, as many critics contend, there isn't any, how can they justify their vast remuneration? When I put these questions to Dalio, he insisted that, through pension funds, Bridgewater's investors include teachers and other public-sector workers, and that the firm created more value for its clients last year than Amazon, eBay, and Yahoo combined. However, it is one thing to say that the most successful hedge-fund managers earn the riches they reap. It is quite another to suggest that the entire industry serves a social purpose. But that is Dalio's contention. "In aggregate, it really contributes a lot to the efficiency of capital allocation, and capital allocation is very important," he said.
Like many successful financiers, Dalio justifies capitalism and his place in it as a Darwinian process, in which the over-all logic of the system is sometimes hidden. This is actually what the mention, in his Principles, of hyenas savaging a wildebeest was about. "Is this good or bad?" he wrote. Like "death itself, this behavior is integral to the enormously complex and efficient system that has worked for as long as there has been life." Of course, this view conveniently ignores the argument that hedge funds, through their herd behavior, have contributed to speculative bubbles, in tech stocks, oil, and other commodities. Even some defenders of the industry concede that the problem is real and potentially calamitous. "There is a basis for the argument that hedge funds add economic value," Andrew Lo, an economist at M.I.T. who runs his own hedge fund, says. "At the same time, they create systemic risks that have to be weighed against those positives."
Because hedge funds use a lot of borrowed money to magnify their bets, they are subject to rapid reversals: the history of the industry is littered with blowups. This wouldn't matter much if other parts of the economy weren't affected by the actions of hedge funds, but sometimes they are. In 2008, hedge funds had hundreds of billions of dollars on deposit at investment banks, which acted as their brokers and counterparties on many trades. When the Wall Street firms got into trouble, a number of other hedge funds demanded their money back immediately. These demands amounted to a virtual run on the banks and helped to bring down Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers. Dalio acknowledged to me that Bridgewater was one of the funds that pulled a lot of money out of Lehman and other Wall Street firms, but he said he had little choice. "I'm a fiduciary to my clients. My responsibility is to know where it's risky and where it's not risky, and to get out of the risks."
Hedge funds have also contributed to the radical increase in income inequality. Fifteen years ago on Wall Street, remuneration packages of five or ten million dollars a year were rare. Today, C.E.O.s and star traders routinely demand vastly higher sums to keep up with their counterparts at hedge funds. In addition to distorting salary structures elsewhere, the rewards that hedge-fund managers reap draw some of the very brightest science and mathematics graduates to the industry. Can it really be in America's interest to have so much of its young talent playing a zero-sum game?
Rather than confronting these issues, Dalio, like all successful predators, is concentrating on the business at hand—the markets and the global economic outlook. This spring, he told me that economic growth in the United States and Europe was set to slow again. This was partly because some emergency policy measures, such as the Obama Administration's stimulus package, would soon come to an end; partly because of the chronic indebtedness that continues to weigh on these regions; and partly because China and other developing countries would be forced to take drastic policy actions to bring down inflation. Now that the slowdown appears to have arrived, Dalio thinks it will be prolonged. "We are still in a deleveraging period," he said. "We will be in a deleveraging period for ten years or more."
Dalio believes that some heavily indebted countries, including the United States, will eventually opt for printing money as a way to deal with their debts, which will lead to a collapse in their currency and in their bond markets. "There hasn't been a case in history where they haven't eventually printed money and devalued their currency," he said. Other developed countries, particularly those tied to the euro and thus to the European Central Bank, don't have the option of printing money and are destined to undergo "classic depressions," Dalio said. The recent deal to avoid an immediate debt default by Greece didn't alter his pessimistic view. "People concentrate on the particular thing of the moment, and they forget the larger underlying forces," he said. "That's what got us into the debt crisis. It's just today, today."
Dalio's assessment sounded alarmingly plausible. But when one plays the global financial markets a thorough economic analysis is only the first stage of the game. At least as important is getting the timing right. I asked Dalio when all this would start to come together. "I think late 2012 or early 2013 is going to be another very difficult period," he said.
As part of its most recent issue the New Yorker has released a must read interview with Ray Dalio - head of the world's biggest hedge fund, Bridgewater. Dalio's fund, which according to some may now be as large as $80 billion, continues to outperform even in this problematic environment, indicating that unlike various other managers who shall remain nameless, and whose wealth is built up almost exclusively on one trade (and that belonging to someone else in the first place), Dalio, despite rumors that he is preparing to leave his current position and is actively seeking a replacement, is still keenly able to adapt to changing macro conditions. Which is why his warning about future rounds of QE, which he sees as a certainty, should be heeded.
Especially since it conforms 100% with the warnings of Zero Hedge -Dalio believes that future inevitable money printing will "lead to a collapse in currencies and bond markets." Dalio is even kind enough to give a time frame. "I think late 2012 or early 2013 is going to be another very difficult period." He is, to say the least, quite diplomatic.
From the full interview at
Dalio believes that some heavily indebted countries, including the United States, will eventually opt for printing money as a way to deal with their debts, which will lead to a collapse in their currency and in their bond markets. "There hasn't been a case in history where they haven't eventually printed money and devalued their currency," he said. Other developed countries, particularly those tied to the euro and thus to the European Central Bank, don't have the option of printing money and are destined to undergo "classic depressions," Dalio said. The recent deal to avoid an immediate debt default by Greece didn't alter his pessimistic view. "People concentrate on the particular thing of the moment, and they forget the larger underlying forces," he said. "That's what got us into the debt crisis. It's just
today, today."
Dalio's assessment sounded alarmingly plausible. But when one plays the global financial markets a thorough economic analysis is only the first stage of the game. At least as important is getting the timing right. I asked Dalio when all this would start to come together. "I think late 2012 or early 2013 is going to be another very difficult period," he said.
Translation: enjoy your -0.002% Bills and paying uncle Sam to hold your money while you can.
Interesting article on inflation vs. Deflation from comparing CPI and PPI
http://dailycapitalist.com/2011/07/15/inflationistas-vs-deflationistas-what-does-cpi-and-ppi-tell-us/
http://dailycapitalist.com/2011/07/15/inflationistas-vs-deflationistas-what-does-cpi-and-ppi-tell-us/
News Highlights - Week of 11 - 15 July 2011
The People's Republic of China's (PRC) gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 9.5% year-on-year (y-o-y) in 2Q11, down slightly from 9.7% in 1Q11, driven primarily by growth in manufacturing and services. Meanwhile, Singapore's GDP growth slowed significantly to 0.5% y-o-y in 2Q11, according to advanced estimates released by the Ministry of Trade and Industry. This reflected a slowdown in many sectors, in particular manufacturing, which contracted 5.5% y-o-y in 2Q11 versus growth of 16.4% in 1Q11.
* The PRC's industrial production grew 15.1% y-o-y in June after growth of 13.3% in May. In the Republic of Korea, sales growth for key department stores fell to 8.2% y-o-y in June from 8.7% in May, while major discount stores' sales rose to 2.7% in June from 2.4% in May. Malaysia's industrial production index dropped 5.1% y-o-y in May, while growth in manufacturing sales slowed to 8.0% in May from 15.2% in April.
* The Bank of Thailand (BOT) raised its 1-day repurchase rate by 25 basis points to 3.25% in its Monetary Policy Committee meeting on 13 July. On 12 July, Bank Indonesia's (BI) Board of Governors decided to keep its reference rate steady at 6.75%. The Bank of Korea's (BOK) Monetary Policy Committee also decided to maintain its base rate-the 7-day repurchase rate-at 3.25% in its 14 July meeting. The Bank of Japan (BOJ) unanimously decided last week to keep the uncollateralized overnight call rate between zero and 0.1 percent.
* In the PRC, M2 money supply growth accelerated in June to 15.9% y-o-y from 15.1% in May. The growth rate in Japan's M2 money supply climbed to a 12-month high of 2.9% y-o-y in June. In the Philippines, the M3 money supply expanded 8.0% y-o-y in May, compared with 7.3% growth in April. Meanwhile, M2 money supply growth for the Republic of Korea slowed to 3.7% from 3.9% in the previous month.
* The Securities Commission of Malaysia issued revised guidelines for private debt securities and sukuk (Islamic bonds) last week. The revised guidelines streamline the approval process and time-to-market for the issuance of corporate bonds and sukuk. The revised guidelines also remove the mandatory rating requirement for selected issues or offers, and provide for greater disclosure of relevant information for debenture holders.
* The Philippine Bureau of the Treasury completed its sixth domestic bond exchange program last week, garnering the highest level of participation to date. A total of PHP299.4 billion worth of bonds were offered in exchange for new 10.5- and 20-year bonds.
* The PRC's Intime Department Store issued CNH1 billion worth of 3-year bonds last week. In the Republic of Korea, Kookmin Bank issued USD300 million of 5.5-year bonds. Singapore Telecommunications (SingTel) issued SGD250 million of 5-year bonds, while the State Railway of Thailand issued THB1 billion of 12-year bonds.
* Government bond yields fell last week for all tenors in the Republic of Korea, and for most tenors in Hong Kong, China; Malaysia; Singapore; and Viet Nam. Yields rose for all tenors in Thailand, and for most tenors in the PRC, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Yield spreads between 2- and 10- year maturities widened in Indonesia, Thailand and Viet Nam, while spreads narrowed in most other emerging East Asian markets.