“Pain plus reflection equals progress.”

– Ray Dalio

Ray Dalio (@raydalio) grew up a middle-class kid from Long Island. He started his investment company Bridgewater Associates out of a two-bedroom apartment at age 26, and it now has roughly $160 billion in assets under management. Over 42 years, he has built Bridgewater into what Fortune considers the fifth most important private company in the U.S.

Along the way, Dalio became one the 100 most influential people in the world (according to Time) and one of the 100 wealthiest people in the world (according to Forbes). Because of his unique investment principles that have changed industries, CIO Magazine dubbed him “the Steve Jobs of investing.”

Ray believes his success is the result of principles he’s learned, codified, and applied to his life and business. Those principles are detailed in his new book Principles: Life and Work.

In this interview, we cover a lot, including:

How Ray thinks about investment decisions, how he thinks about correlation, etc.

The three books he would give to every graduating high school or college senior

How he might assess cryptocurrency

And much, much more…

Enjoy!

#264: Ray Dalio, The Steve Jobs of Investing https://rss.art19.com/episodes/12871ab9-f085-4f1e-83db-7b088c4a2d92.mp3 Download

Listen to it on iTunes.

Stream by clicking here.

Download as an MP3 by right-clicking here and choosing “save as.”

Want to hear a podcast featuring another great investor? — Listen to this conversation with Naval Ravikant. In this episode, we discuss the habits and behaviors of both highly successful and happy people (stream below or right-click here to download):

#97: The Evolutionary Angel, Naval Ravikant https://rss.art19.com/episodes/68f95546-fd20-47f4-8dd1-37e652f4d70c.mp3 Download

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QUESTION(S) OF THE DAY: What was your favorite quote or lesson from this episode? Please let me know in the comments.

Scroll below for links and show notes…

Selected Links from the Episode

Principles: Life and Work by Ray Dalio

Connect with Ray Dalio:

Bridgewater Associates | Principles.com | Twitter | Facebook

Show Notes

Ray describes his middle class childhood in Long Island and what got him hooked on investing at the tender age of 12. [06:33]

What Ray learned about business as “a professional mistake-maker.” [08:29]

“Pain plus reflection equals progress.” [12:01]

Many mistakes are avoidable if we remember to look outside of the events of our own lifetimes and experiences. [14:39]

What Ray has learned about patterns from examining history — on a grand scale and in everyday life. [16:42]

How evidence-based meritocracy works at the radically truthful, radically transparent environment at Bridgewater. [20:07]

Ray talks about the function of his company’s “pain button” app. [23:21]

On the “invaluable” benefits of Transcendental Meditation (which Ray has been practicing since 1969). [25:59]

Ray gives us the specifics behind his daily TM routine (and what he does when he’s not in his usual surroundings). [29:54]

Other tools developed at Bridgewater that promote the company’s culture of truth and transparency. [33:29]

Ray explains the three things that go into nurturing an “idea meritocracy” in a company culture — and its benefits. [36:33]

The “Two-Minute Rule” and other protocols for preventing disagreement from boiling over into emotionally charged fighting. [40:35]

Why does Ray remember early failures more vividly than early successes — and what does this tell him about both? [43:14]

What helped Bridgewater win out over some of its more established competition? [46:59]

The three ingredients of a successful life. [47:12]

What makes intelligent people unhappy? [48:22]

Our personal experiences with clinical depression. [49:41]

Four protocols Ray’s son Paul follows for dealing with bipolar disorder. [53:24]

What I’ve recently learned about observing a consistent, earlier bedtime. [56:03]

Why it’s important to work toward removing the stigma of mental illness. [56:57]

Ray talks about some of his own positive influences and role models growing up. [1:00:24]

What is Ray’s reading process? [1:02:18]

Books in Ray’s current reading list. [1:04:31]

How does Ray choose what to read? [1:08:00]

The three books Ray would give to every graduating high school or college senior. [1:09:49]

The best investors I’ve met almost all have a fascination with evolution. Why is that? [1:11:50]

Good ways to explore or investigate someone else’s reasoning behind their conclusions. [1:14:42]

Ray clarifies one of his most misunderstood maxims: “Don’t pick your battles; fight them all.” [1:16:32]

What Ray considers the overarching challenge we all face, and how our challenges adapt over time. [1:17:50]

How does Ray define and think about risk? [1:22:54]

A deep dive into data sets and the layers on uncorrelated bets. [1:29:43]

Learning the basics: Ray explains economics as “a pretty simple machine” in his famous 30-minute video. [1:37:40]

How would Ray begin to assess if a new investment opportunity — such as cryptocurrency — is worthwhile? [1:38:38]

Assessing the motivations of buyers and sellers. [1:42:05]

How should the decreasing value of a favored asset class change an investor’s behavior? [1:45:00]

How is Ray’s diversification approach unique? [1:48:00]

What advice would Ray have for someone who has the majority of their concentrated portfolio in a particular asset? [1:48:47]

What would Ray’s self-talk be like if he found himself stuck in a difficult investment position? [1:51:38]

Has stress ever caused Ray to liquidate all positions and start over? [1:53:17]

Psychology is a big deal in the markets. Here’s how Ray uses technology to remove a lot of his own emotional stress from the equation. [1:54:46]

Wrapping up: making transitions and sharing principles. [1:57:40]

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Posted on: September 13, 2017.

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Please check out Tribe of Mentors, my newest book, which shares short, tactical life advice from 100+ world-class performers. Many of the world's most famous entrepreneurs, athletes, investors, poker players, and artists are part of the book. The tips and strategies in Tribe of Mentors have already changed my life, and I hope the same for you. Click here for a sample chapter and full details. Roughly 90% of the guests have never appeared on my podcast.

Who was interviewed? Here's a very partial list: tech icons (founders of Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Craigslist, Pinterest, Spotify, Salesforce, Dropbox, and more), Jimmy Fallon, Arianna Huffington, Brandon Stanton (Humans of New York), Lord Rabbi Jonathan Sacks, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, Ben Stiller, Maurice Ashley (first African-American Grandmaster of chess), Brené Brown (researcher and bestselling author), Rick Rubin (legendary music producer), Temple Grandin (animal behavior expert and autism activist), Franklin Leonard (The Black List), Dara Torres (12-time Olympic medalist in swimming), David Lynch (director), Kelly Slater (surfing legend), Bozoma Saint John (Beats/Apple/Uber), Lewis Cantley (famed cancer researcher), Maria Sharapova, Chris Anderson (curator of TED), Terry Crews, Greg Norman (golf icon), Vitalik Buterin (creator of Ethereum), and nearly 100 more. Check it all out by clicking here.