Ray Dalio said the United States has crossed a debt threshold from which it cannot return, and the Federal Reserve may soon be forced into a 1930s-style policy of holding interest rates artificially low.

Speaking at the Forbes Iconoclast Summit, the Bridgewater Associates founder told Bloomberg’s Dani Burger that $7 trillion in federal spending against $5 trillion in revenue is squeezing the economy “like plaque in the arteries.”

The Bond Market Test

Dalio said long rates are already rising relative to short rates, a classic signal that bondholders are losing patience with low real returns. He pointed to a weakening dollar and rising gold prices as confirmation of the dynamic.

The investor flagged Kevin Warsh, the new Federal Reserve chair, as likely to face a bond market test of his stated independence.

Dalio compared the likely outcome to financial repression, where the Treasury and Fed coordinate to suppress yields, often alongside higher taxation and inflation.

What Polymarket Traders Are Pricing

Prediction market traders appear aligned with the cautious view. Polymarket’s “How many Fed rate cuts in 2026?” market, with over $31 million in volume, prices zero cuts at 68% and a single cut at 18%.

A separate contract on whether Warsh cuts rates at his first Federal Reserve meeting sits at just 3%, while traders assign a 39% probability to a Fed rate hike in 2026, up substantially from the start of the year.

The China Wild Card For AI Stocks

Dalio connected the debt situation directly to geopolitics, saying the United States is “overextended” and can no longer credibly contain China. He said that realization is already shifting how Asian leaders behave.

The Bridgewater founder said it is “entirely within the power” of the Chinese government to announce a week-long blockade on chip exports, and that such a signal alone would crash the AI trade.

Nvidia Corp. (NASDAQ:NVDA), which depends heavily on Taiwan-based foundry capacity, sits at the center of that scenario.

Polymarket’s “Will China invade Taiwan by end of 2026?” contract trades at just 6% on $10.7 million in volume, and a market on a blockade is also at 6%, meaning traders think either is unlikely any time soon.

Dalio’s playbook for his forecasted turbulence ahead includes gold, hard assets and reduced exposure to long-dated US debt.

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