The chief investment officer at the world’s biggest hedge fund says we’re headed for a recession that’s ‘double the normal length’—and it has a lot to do with China
The world’s biggest hedge fund is sounding the alarm about the potential for a protracted multiyear recession.
Bridgewater Associates co–chief investment officer Greg Jensen warned this week that during periods of high inflation like what the U.S. economy is experiencing today, recessions tend to last longer—unless central banks slash interest rates quickly.
And Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell made it clear this week that rate cuts aren’t in the cards.
“We’d expect kind of double the normal length of a recession because the Fed’s not going to be at your back for a long time, and that’s a big deal,” Jensen told Bloomberg on Friday.
The Bridgewater co-CIO said that the “good news” is that there is far less leverage in the financial system compared with the period before the Great Recession of 2008, which he believes will prevent a “cascading effect” in markets that causes a deep recession.
“Instead, you have this long grind that’s probably a couple years,” he said.
Jensen expects inflation will come down next year as a recession hits, but he argued that there will be a mixed bag of good and bad inflation reports that could weigh on stocks.
Not everyone on Wall Street agrees. Economists at Bank of America cut their inflation forecast for next year to just 2.8% on Friday, citing a “sharp drop” in goods prices. And Goldman Sachs is expecting just 2.7% inflation by the end of 2023.
But it may be wise to listen to Bridgewater’s co-CIO.
Jensen—who worked his way up the ranks at Bridgewater for 26 years under the tutelage of the fund’s billionaire founder, Ray Dalio—was one of the few CIOs on Wall Street to spot the rise of inflation in 2021.
Before the carnage that markets experienced this year, he warned that inflation would be a persistent issue and things would be “bad for investors going forward.”
Reiterating that forecast on Friday, Jensen argued that investors have yet to price in the coming multiyear recession and inflation that will remain above the Fed’s 2% target for some time.
“You haven’t seen the bottom in risky assets,” he warned. “It’s going to be a couple year down cycle here.”
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