Billionaire Ray Dalio has strong reaction to US debt rating cut

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Look at the stock market's gains over the past six weeks, and you wouldn't be blamed for thinking all is back to hunky dory.

After a nearly 20% drop from its February highs amid tariff turmoil, the S&P 500 has rebounded sharply, recovering most of its losses. Since April 9, the S&P 500 has gained 19%, and after its big move, it has risen by 1.4% year to date.

The gains are welcome, but stocks and the U.S. economy may not yet be out of the woods. The rally was built on optimism that trade deals would shrink tariffs' bite, but deals take time, and even with negotiations, tariffs will likely still represent the biggest tax increase in decades.

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We may see inflation rekindle itself, crimping spending, and uncertainty over policy may mean businesses retrench while awaiting clarity. It also doesn't help that despite recent efforts to tame government spending, the U.S. deficit remains massive, and America's debt obligations continue to climb.

The risks associated with our deficit aren't lost on market participants, including Moody's, one of the nation's top-three credit rating agencies, and billionaire Ray Dalio, the legendary founder of the hedge fund Bridgewater, which has $112 billion in assets under management.

On May 16, Moody's cut its rating on U.S. debt from its highest level, citing concerns over our debt and spending. The move caught the eye of Dalio, who has pounded the table regarding debt in the past year.

<em>Ray Dalio, founder and CIO mentor at Bridgewater Associates, recently offered a stark take on the U.S. economy.</em>Image source&colon; Dia Dipasupil&sol;Getty Images
Ray Dalio, founder and CIO mentor at Bridgewater Associates, recently offered a stark take on the U.S. economy.Image source: Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images

U.S. economic armor has cracks forming

The U.S. economy contracted 0.3% in the first quarter, a sharp decline from the 2.3% GDP growth in the fourth quarter and 3% and 3.1% in the second and third quarters, respectively.

The decline has raised concerns that once the negative impact of tariffs on spending flows into the economy, we could experience stagflation or recession this year.

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The worries aren't without merit, given that the U.S. economy isn't as healthy this year as in 2024.

Inflation has retreated, but progress has slowed, and household budgets are still under pressure from price spikes in 2022 and 2023. The Consumer Price Index inflation was 2.3% in April 2025, only slightly better than the 2.4% recorded last September.

Moreover, inflation could reemerge after newly instituted tariffs, including 25% tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and autos, a 10% baseline tariff, and, after a recent rollback, a still onerous 30% tariff on China.