



The Fund
Ray Dalio, Bridgewater Associates and The Unraveling of a Wall Street Legend
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- 55,00 kr
Publisher Description
'The most explosive, mind-blowing business book I've ever read' – Bradley Hope, New York Times bestselling author of Billion Dollar Whale
'Jaw-dropping . . . well-told, well-structured and exquisitely reported' – Financial Times
Discover the unauthorized, unvarnished story of famed Wall Street hedge-fund manager Ray Dalio.
Ray Dalio is the billionaire founder of Bridgewater Associates, the world's largest hedge fund. In The Fund, Rob Copeland draws on hundreds of interviews with those inside and around the firm to reveal what really goes on with Dalio and his cohorts behind closed doors.
Tracing more than fifty years of Dalio's leadership, The Fund peels back the curtain to reveal a rarefied world of wealth and power, where former FBI director Jim Comey kisses Dalio's ring, recent Pennsylvania Senate candidate David McCormick sells out, and countless Bridgewater acolytes describe what it's like to work at this fascinating firm.
When Dalio announced in October 2022 that he was stepping down from the company he founded forty-seven years ago, the news made headlines around the world. Dalio achieved worldwide fame thanks to a mystique of success cultivated in frequent media appearances, celebrity hobnobbing, and his bestselling book, Principles.
Dalio has stepped down from Bridgewater before; will the legacy of his Principles continue to chart the course of the firm? The Fund provides unique insight into the story of Dalio and Bridgewater, past, present and future.
'A taut, nonfiction thriller' – Bryan Burrough, bestselling author of Barbarians at the Gate
'Manages to both shock and entertain at the same time' – Philipp Meyer, bestselling author of American Rust and The Son
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Nutty doctrine and cutthroat office politics prevailed at the world's largest hedge fund, according to this searing debut exposé. New York Times reporter Copeland follows the career of Ray Dalio, founder of the Bridgewater Associates hedge fund, finding that contrary to the billionaire's claims to have instituted a strictly rational trading system, decisions were often directed by Dalio's haphazard guesses. (Dalio's habit of seeing recessions around every corner often led to losing bets, Copeland argues.) Investigating the fund's bizarre office politics, Copeland explains that Dalio implemented a "radical transparency" regime under which employees were compelled to rate each other on fuzzy metrics like "believability," and new hires confessed their weaknesses while facing a totem pole. Surveillance was extensive; meetings were recorded and replayed to find expressions of wrong-think, and in one particularly egregious instance staffers were enlisted to monitor company urinals after Dalio spotted pee on the bathroom floor. Writing with droll aplomb, Copeland takes a torch to Dalio's reputation as a Wall Street savant, instead finding him an egotistical billionaire with a penchant for cruelty (he once publicly reduced to tears an employee whose work he was dissatisfied with, shouting "You're a dumb shit!... You don't even know what you don't know"). The result is a hugely entertaining depiction of unbridled wealth colliding with unhinged folly.