Dalio Backs Off of Recession Prediction

Bridgewater titan’s forecast shows less doom and gloom than before, although some concern remains.

Hedge fund titan Ray Dalio has again weighed in on monetary policy, this time with a more upbeat tone: He no longer thinks a recession is around the corner.

The reason: Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s recent signal, in the face of late-2018’s market selloff, that he would go slower on hiking interest rates. Dalio of Bridgewater Associates reduced his pre-2020 election recession odds to roughly 35%, from 50%. The Fed may well not raise rates at all in 2019, so Dalio can sleep a little easier.

“Because the markets weakened and Fed officials now see that the economy and inflation are weak, there has been a shift to an easier stance by the Fed,” he said in a LinkedIn post. “Similarly, because of weaker markets, economies, and inflation rates in other countries, other central banks have also become more inclined to ease, though they have less room to ease than the Fed.”

However, the founder and co-chief investment officer of the world’s largest hedge fund is still troubled by economic weakness that central banks may not be able to fix. The continued slowing of global growth doesn’t help, nor do domestic and international conflicts such as the US and China’s trade war and Brexit’s looming deadline.

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Dalio said the Fed can probably manage the “big sag” economists are predicting, but things aren’t so rosy on the other side of the world. The situation, he said, was “more concerning” as a result.

“In Europe, the ECB appears unable and/or unwilling to adequately ease (because of politics and structural issues) while circumstances (the sag in growth and sub-target inflation) warrant an easing,” he said, predicting “chronic slow growth” if populist political forces increase.

Source: LinkedIn

“In Japan, we also see low growth and low inflation with slightly more room to do QE and better yield curve controls than Europe has (though the marginal effects of these will be limited),” said Dalio.


Lastly, Bridgewater’s founder said, although China’s government is doing its best to offset its growth slump with more fiscal and monetary stimulation, it’s not enough to re-normalize growth.

 “In other emerging countries, we are generally also seeing weaker growth and inflation, and the increased ability to ease monetary policy, but not yet enough easing to cause recoveries to desired levels,” he said.

Source: LinkedIn

Bridgewater Associates has $160 billion in assets under management.

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Accountant Trustee Used Pension as ‘Personal Piggy Bank’

UK regulator also charges husband and wife for defrauding charity.

A UK-based accountant who acted as a pension plan trustee and administrator has admitted to unlawfully transferring more than £280,000 ($370,603) of pension funds to support his own businesses and investments, according to The Pensions Regulator (TPR).

Roger William Bessent pled guilty to five counts of fraud and two counts of making employer-related investments. It was the first time TPR had prosecuted anyone for fraud by abuse of position and making employer-related investments by way of prohibited loans.

Fraud by abuse of position carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison and making a prohibited employer-related investment carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison. Bessent’s sentencing has been scheduled for March 29.

“Bessent used the pension scheme as his personal piggy bank, transferring out hundreds of thousands of pounds for his own personal benefit and to keep his other businesses going,” Nicola Parish, TPR’s executive director of frontline regulation, said in a release. “As an accountant, Bessent was someone that people would turn to for advice and put their trust in. He abused that trust and used his position as trustee to defraud the scheme for his benefit and the benefit of his friends and family.”

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According to the charges, Bessent took the money from the Focusplay Retirement Benefit Scheme and put it into struggling and new businesses he part owned, and which he ran with his family and a client. TPR said he did this by converting the transfers into loans, falsifying official minutes and records of the pension, and listing other trustees as present at meetings when they were not. TPR said that approximately £80,000 of the total has been repaid.

According to the regulator, Bessent used more than £120,000 to buy himself and his wife a house to rent out as a personal investment, despite the fact that their daughter lived in it with her partner. Other funds from the pension were used to pay tax bills for Bessent’s accountancy business, subsidize costs of child care, and as start-up investment capital in his son-in-law’s physiotherapy business.

Separate to TPR’s action, the Insolvency Service prosecuted Bessent for breaching a disqualification undertaking from 2017, which banned him from being a company director. He pled guilty to one count of acting as a director of a limited company while disqualified.

TPR also said that a former head of a charity for the disabled will be prosecuted on suspicion of having defrauded the charity’s pension.

The regulator said Patrick McLarry faces a charge of fraud for allegedly transferring more than £250,000 from the pension of Yateley Industries for the Disabled, while his wife, Sandra McLarry, faces four charges of money laundering. This is the first time that TPR has brought a prosecution for the offense. Money laundering carries a maximum sentence of 14 years’ imprisonment.

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