Ray Dalio’s Famous Trade Is Sputtering, Investors Bailing

  • Post-pandemic era caps a long run of lackluster returns
  • Funds have lagged 60/40 portfolios for the last five years

WATCH: The risk-parity trade is looking less attractive to investors.

It was an irresistible pitch. Give us your money, executives at Ray Dalio’s Bridgewater Associates and other hedge funds said, and we’ll funnel it into a money-minting, sure-thing strategy for the long haul. But now, after five years of sub-par returns, many of the institutional investors who sunk large sums into risk-parity funds, as they’re known, are demanding the money back.

Investors including public pensions in New Mexico, Oregon and Ohio have yanked out cash, slashing the size of the funds by an estimated $70 billion from their peak three years ago. For many, the pleas from firms for more time — that the next decade in markets is unlikely to resemble the last — ring hollow.