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Just noticed something pretty significant in the hedge fund space. Ray Dalio officially completed his full exit from Bridgewater on July 31st—liquidated his remaining stake and stepped down from the board. This marks the end of an era that's been running for 50 years.
For context, Dalio started this whole thing back in 1975 with just 20 grand in a two-bedroom apartment. Built it into the world's largest hedge fund managing around 92 billion in assets. The guy basically shaped modern hedge fund management. He'd already stepped down as CEO in 2017 and handed off day-to-day operations in 2022, but this final move is different—it's the complete exit.
What's interesting is his retirement statement on X. He's genuinely excited about it, not the typical bittersweet founder farewell. He said something like "I have seen Bridgewater thrive in my absence, even better than when I was there." That's actually a rare thing to hear from someone who built something from scratch.
The structure they've set up is pretty smart too. Instead of one person running things, they distributed power across multiple leaders—Nir Bar Dea, David McCormick as co-CEOs, Bob Prince and Greg Jensen as co-CIOs. Bob Prince became the largest individual partner, which helps maintain continuity of their investment philosophy. Their famous "radical transparency" culture apparently survived the transition.
Another plot twist: Brunei's sovereign wealth fund came in and grabbed nearly a fifth of the shares, becoming a major institutional shareholder. So it's not just about generational leadership change anymore—international capital is now a significant player in the structure.
The whole thing shows how a mega-fund can actually depersonalize itself. Most hedge funds live or die by their founder's reputation. Dalio managed to build something that works without him being in the room, which honestly is the hardest part of scaling any operation. Whether Bridgewater maintains its edge under the new leadership is the real question now, but the setup they've created gives them a decent shot at it.