Ray Dalio slams ‘tragedy’ of a New York Times journalist’s shocking book about him, claiming he was a Bridgewater reject who wrote ‘fiction, created as fact’
Fortune · Fortune

Ray Dalio, the founder of the world’s largest hedge fund, Bridgewater Associates, sat down for a conversation with Fortune CEO Alan Murray at the Fortune Global Forum in Abu Dhabi Wednesday. As usual, the billionaire investing legend held forth on macroeconomics, geopolitics and the business climate. But he also talked about that book.

Despite stepping down from his role leading Bridgewater late last year, where he remains a CIO mentor and board member, Dalio has been even more in the public eye of late after the release of a scathing, unauthorized expose by New York Times reporter Rob Copeland, called The Fund: Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates, and the Unraveling of a Wall Street Legend

The book paints a less-than-rosy picture of Dalio and his path to success at Bridgewater, although it largely focuses on internal staffing and management disputes rather than Dalio’s decades-long record as one of the greats of the hedge fund world. Dalio has been critical of the book since before it came out, and in fact has criticized Copeland’s coverage of him for years, going back to when the reporter worked at the Wall Street Journal. But on Wednesday, in Abu Dhabi, he didn’t hold back, even about a journalist with well over a decade of experience at two of America's oldest and proudest newspapers, which observe the highest journalistic standards, as Murray pointed out.

The billionaire said the book is all just “fiction, created as fact” by a reporter with a vendetta. It’s a black eye for all journalists, Dalio continued: “When truth gets mixed with fiction by journalists, the country has a problem.”

Distorted stories or a toxic workplace?

The story of The Fund starts more than a decade ago, Dalio said Wednesday, when Copeland applied for a job at Bridgewater and was rejected before beginning his career in journalism. Dalio claimed that this experience led Copeland to “make stuff up” and “exaggerate” when writing about the hedge fund. (Copeland disclosed his own job interview experiences with Bridgewater in his book, which included extensive comments from Bridgewater and Dalio’s legal representatives.)

Dalio, who initially responded to the book on LinkedIn by accusing Copeland of making a career out of “writing distorted stories about me and Bridgewater,” argued in conversation with Fortune that this book goes beyond distortion: “He will make up the conversation between two people, and there are only two people in the room and both of them said the conversation never happened.”

Dalio even said there were “over 400” instances where a fact checker found that key points were “made up” by Copeland, although he did not mention from the stage that Bridgewater's comments were reflected throughout Copeland's book, indicating that he followed a thorough fact-checking process.