Billionaire Ray Dalio weighed in on Moody’s latest downgrade of the U.S. creditworthiness, claiming the transfer understates the danger of presidency debt. 

Moody’s dropped the nation from its triple-A class to a double-A ranking on Friday, simply forward of the GOP’s spending invoice — largely centered on President Trump’s legislative priorities — which might add almost $4 trillion to the federal deficit.

“Re the U.S. debt downgrade, you should know that credit ratings understate credit risks because they only rate the risk of the government not paying its debt,” the Bridgewater co-founder wrote in a Monday publish on social platform X.

“They don’t include the greater risk that the countries in debt will print money to pay their debts thus causing holders of the bonds to suffer losses from the decreased value of the money they’re getting (rather than from the decreased quantity of money they’re getting),” the hedge fund supervisor added.

Moody’s stated the decrease ranking displays a rise “in government debt and interest payment ratios to levels that are significantly higher than similarly rated sovereigns,” in a Friday launch.

The company has not beforehand taken a downgrade ranking motion on U.S. sovereign debt, a consultant for the company informed The Hill. The Dow Jones, S&P and Nasdaq have every seen losses on account of the drop. 

The Trump administration blamed former President Biden for the downgrade citing “reckless spending” as an influencing consider Moody’s resolution however added that they had been now working to create the “best economy on Earth.”

“Make no mistake, the U.S. debt is the safest bet on Earth. There is no country’s debt that I’d rather have than the United States’s. And so, Moody’s can do what it wants to,” White Home Nationwide Financial Council Director Kevin Hassett stated throughout a latest interview on Fox Enterprise Community.

Regardless of their confidence, Dalio stated the nation was “very close” to a recession in early April after Trump unveiled his sweeping tariff agenda. Whereas a lot of the reciprocal tariffs are below a pause, the president’s 10 p.c baseline tax remains to be in play on almost all international imports.

In his publish on Monday, the billionaire stated, “the risks for U.S. government debt are greater than the rating agencies are conveying,” referring to the credit score downgrade.