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Ray Dalio's all weather portfolio
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Prism said:Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.
In terms of aggregates take gold as an example. Gold is worth $10.9tn vs total global wealth of $360tn. The 'market' has looked at what happened in the past and decided a 3% asset allocation is about right. Deciding 7.5% is a better allocation is a big call.
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Sailtheworld said:Prism said:Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.
In terms of aggregates take gold as an example. Gold is worth $10.9tn vs total global wealth of $360tn. The 'market' has looked at what happened in the past and decided a 3% asset allocation is about right. Deciding 7.5% is a better allocation is a big call.
We have to look at past situations to some degree and look for things that have worked, even if they don't going forwards. Otherwise its all complete guesswork.1 -
sixpence. said:aroominyork said:sixpence. said:What do people think of hedged vs unhedged with regards to GBP currency risk?"Real knowledge is to know the extent of one's ignorance" - Confucius0
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Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.
No one has ever become poor by giving2 -
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Prism said:Sailtheworld said:Prism said:Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.
In terms of aggregates take gold as an example. Gold is worth $10.9tn vs total global wealth of $360tn. The 'market' has looked at what happened in the past and decided a 3% asset allocation is about right. Deciding 7.5% is a better allocation is a big call.
We have to look at past situations to some degree and look for things that have worked, even if they don't going forwards. Otherwise its all complete guesswork.
He's also not tailored it to people's timelines (as far as I can see) because if he was using the past to predict the future and knew someone had, say, a 50 year investing window ahead there would be substantially more equities at the front end.
That fund might be right for you and wrong for me or vice versa so maybe there is a substantial element of guesswork?
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thegentleway said:Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.
I don't particularly have a view on the components but all-weather implies a generic suitability which is just nonsense.0 -
Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.0 -
sixpence. said:Sailtheworld said:Ray Dalio's portfolio has a capital allocation which differs from the market aggregate. Therefore he must be predicting a different future than the market. I suppose it depends whether someone following this approach thinks he's in a position to achieve this. I don't want to be mealy mouthed because he's obviously been a success but it seems to have been made from commissions on other people's trades.
The big warning sign is someone's name in a fund / portfolio plus the one size fits all approach.0 -
@Sailtheworld It's not generic it's diversified across asset classes in a way that claims to be so strategically sophisticated that it can weather all economic downturns. There's a difference.0
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