Ray Dalio, Founder, Bridgewater speaks with Bloomberg’s David Westin at Bloomberg Invest New York. -------- Subscribe to Bloomberg Live on RU-vid: / @bloomberg_live
Heard someone say the best season for a fin.ancial breakthrough is now, especially with inflation running high. I have approximately $250k stagnant in my port_folio that needs growth. What is the best way to take advantage of this downturn?
An obvious way to invest for a recession is to buy shares in businesses that are likely to experience steady demand even in a downturn. Typically, those are consumer staples, utilities, and healthcare companies, but off course such decisions cannot be made by an average Joe, a financial advisor is important in making this decisions
@@LeonardoScott Such considerations can certainly have a role when I think about whether I ought to buy into a share. But I never purchase purely on that basis, i always have to seek the advice of my financial planner who has helped me gain $985k in a well-diversified portfolio that has experienced exponential growth
@@dianarabbanii2 That’s impressive! I need guidance so i can salvage my portfolio due to the massive dips and come up with better strategies. How can i reach this advsor?
@@dianarabbanii2 I looked up Viviana Marisa Coelho online and researched her accreditation. She seem very proficient, I wrote her detailing my Fin-markt
The possibility that in the USA you can move to a state where taxes and values etc match your own is a strength in my opinion. It is decentralization where, in acceptance of the fact that people are different, you have the opportunity to organize the different states differently. It is not just decentralization, but freedom, individual freedom.
@@Gsoda35 Please let me give you some examples that emphasize my point. Recently we have seen and experienced citizens moving from New York to Florida and from California to Texas. Citizens vote with their feet and the States compete to attract. This is freedom to choose and free market forces combined. Makes sence?
If you want to understand the world you need to read this article: Published on 17 Jan 2006 by Energy Bulletin. The Proposed Iranian Oil Bourse by Krassimir Petrov I. Economics of Empires A nation-state taxes its own citizens, while an empire taxes other nation-states. The history of empires, from Greek and Roman, to Ottoman and British, teaches that the economic foundation of every single empire is the taxation of other nations. The imperial ability to tax has always rested on a better and stronger economy, and as a consequence, a better and stronger military. One part of the subject taxes went to improve the living standards of the empire; the other part went to strengthen the military dominance necessary to enforce the collection of those taxes.
They say demographics are destiny. That isn't true. Education is destiny. The US primary and secondary education began falling behind since the late 80s to early 90s We see those fruits today. The students from the 00s and 2010s are much worse. US colleges in STEM are propped up more than 50% by foreign students, and the immigration policies send those educated foreigners home. Expect to get worse and worse labor force replacing valuable retiring boomers in key industries. There's no escape from that destiny. It was written in stone 20-30 years back.
Ray is great. But economists really think of numbers. The divisiin of our western nations is not based on simple shallow values, but critical values of no compromise. There is no bipartisan on many of the core values.
Irreconcilable difference... why bother the difference.. does it matter if you win or lose because in term of growth or development of tech over all it make no difference one is going to lose the race. Its not splitting hair .. it might be now ... but soon it will not be. Economic cohesive will not happen if US keep bullying ..even EU Japan S Korea feels this.
I find ray dalio very interesting intelligent and I appreciate his trying to educate. I do find his description of populism a bit interesting. I find it interesting because of his use of the phrase the rules of the game don't matter. I find it interesting because Ray dalio is clearly one of the global controlling elites, and I assume what he means by the rules of the game don't matter is simply that the rules that the elite have set up for how things get done and how they like things get done suddenly I've pushed aside. I would posit that that is the case because the people recognize shortcomings in the system that they're told they must operate in. In fact if you just think about it, that very system is the thing that created the inequity that people are roiling against. If you just look at our leadership, that is the politicians, you will notice that there is very little change across many decades. That in itself is another clue that things in the system probably need changing because dissatisfaction of the populace grows and they blame everybody except the people that are in theory in control. That in itself is an odd situation, and I would say can only be explained by a control of the narrative by those political folks, and the ruling elite that actually stand behind them. Lucky for us, organizations like the world economic Forum no longer hide in the shadows, but post there plans openly. I think that will make it easier for the populace to see the people actually pulling the strings.
I like your comment. People see things not working for them so they want change to the system, and the traditional parties / politicians will not change. So people respond to "populists". The problem is that the populists are reactionary and often angry, so the danger is over-reaction or just "time to tear down the whole system" kind of thinking. It's very discouraging living in a western democracy these days because Asia is rising rapidly and undermining our industrial base, so there is a shrinking middle class. Flipping burgers and working in a retail setting does not replace the wealth that manufacturing produces. I don't like politicians because they simply do not address, let alone solve real problems. Government is utterly self serving now. They do nothing to strengthen the private sector worker. Absolutely nothing.