Ray Dalio’s ‘All Weather’ Strategy Enters ETF Land During Turmoil

Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio’s famous “All Weather” strategy has arrived in the exchange-traded fund market, just as the kind of macro-driven turmoil it seeks to guard against sweeps global assets.

The SPDR Bridgewater All Weather ETF begins trading on Thursday under the ticker ALLW, according to a press release. The fund, which charges 0.85% annually, will be managed by State Street Global Advisors and sub-advised by Bridgewater, which will provide a daily model portfolio for the ETF.

All Weather is arguably the most well-known example of risk parity, an investment approach that allocates to different assets based on their levels of volatility. Rather than pile predominantly into a riskier asset class like stocks to get big returns, the idea is to achieve similar results with a more diversified, safer portfolio, often combined with leverage.

Bridgewater’s iteration emphasizes holding a balance of assets that will weather the ups and downs of a business cycle, and it seems an opportune time to be making such a pitch. Volatility has gripped global markets as US President Donald Trump slaps tariffs on the country’s trading partners, American economic data starts to weaken, and investors recalibrate expectations for Europe.

In a white paper this month, Bridgewater wrote that 15 years of extraordinary US stock performance has left investors with near-record levels of concentration and lofty valuations, while increasingly high earnings expectations are baked in. Against that backdrop, ALLW will invest across international and US equities, nominal and inflation-linked bonds and commodities.