Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio recently spoke frankly in an interview: the market bubble has already formed. The question is not whether there is a bubble, but when it will burst.
Dalio pointed out that some sectors are already flashing red lights. "Monetary policy will not tighten in the short term, and in fact, it’s still easing. But you can see cracks expanding—private equity, venture capital, debt refinancing, they’re everywhere," he said. "Based on various indicators, we are indeed in a bubble."
However, he also emphasized that this is an AI-driven bubble. A bubble does not mean an imminent crash.
"Historically, every major technological revolution has spawned a bubble, with hot money pouring in crazily. But it’s never all smooth sailing. Either you invest too much and end up wasting money, or invest too little and miss opportunities, followed by intense volatility..." Dalio compared this bubble to the 2000 Internet bubble, "While it’s not as exaggerated as 1929, it’s similar in nature. The key question is, when will the bubble burst?"
His advice is very practical: don’t rush to sell just because it’s a bubble. Keep an eye on warning signs, especially signs of tightening monetary supply. "You need to understand that wealth and money are two different things. It’s too easy to create wealth during a bubble; any project can raise hundreds of millions of dollars, with valuations skyrocketing..." (The original text cuts off here)
For crypto market participants, these words are worth pondering. How long can the market frenzy fueled by the AI boom last? Perhaps the answer lies in signals indicating a shift in monetary policy.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
8 Likes
Reward
8
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
ConsensusDissenter
· 12-13 09:15
Hearing Dalio's rhetoric so often, the key still depends on the central bank's stance.
View OriginalReply0
BridgeNomad
· 12-10 14:51
ngl, this dalio take is giving me 2017 vibes... watching TVL fragmentation across chains rn and it's lowkey terrifying. the liquidity's spreading too thin, trust assumptions r breaking everywhere. when monetary policy finally tightens, we're gonna see some nasty cascade failures on bridges nobody's even auditing properly. seen this movie b4, doesn't end well
Reply0
SerumSquirrel
· 12-10 14:43
Bro Darío is right, there is definitely a bubble, but this wave of AI is different... the real highlight is when the monetary policy shifts.
View OriginalReply0
MEVictim
· 12-10 14:32
Dario's words have been heard a thousand times, but no one can predict exactly when the bubble will burst.
Wait, he said this time it's AI-driven? So what about us shitcoin farmers? Are we being sold out?
View OriginalReply0
MonkeySeeMonkeyDo
· 12-10 14:26
Dario mentioned bubbles... but we're all riding this pig haha
Waiting for the moment when monetary policy shifts, then we'll see who is still swimming naked
Making a profit before the AI bubble bursts, this is the right way
Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio recently spoke frankly in an interview: the market bubble has already formed. The question is not whether there is a bubble, but when it will burst.
Dalio pointed out that some sectors are already flashing red lights. "Monetary policy will not tighten in the short term, and in fact, it’s still easing. But you can see cracks expanding—private equity, venture capital, debt refinancing, they’re everywhere," he said. "Based on various indicators, we are indeed in a bubble."
However, he also emphasized that this is an AI-driven bubble. A bubble does not mean an imminent crash.
"Historically, every major technological revolution has spawned a bubble, with hot money pouring in crazily. But it’s never all smooth sailing. Either you invest too much and end up wasting money, or invest too little and miss opportunities, followed by intense volatility..." Dalio compared this bubble to the 2000 Internet bubble, "While it’s not as exaggerated as 1929, it’s similar in nature. The key question is, when will the bubble burst?"
His advice is very practical: don’t rush to sell just because it’s a bubble. Keep an eye on warning signs, especially signs of tightening monetary supply. "You need to understand that wealth and money are two different things. It’s too easy to create wealth during a bubble; any project can raise hundreds of millions of dollars, with valuations skyrocketing..." (The original text cuts off here)
For crypto market participants, these words are worth pondering. How long can the market frenzy fueled by the AI boom last? Perhaps the answer lies in signals indicating a shift in monetary policy.