Thursday, 4 June 2026
7/6 SUMMARY OF POSTS 1 TO 6 - BACK TO REALITY - HOW IT ALL CONNECTS
6/6 BEYOND THE MARKET - THE WHOLE DALIO MACHINE
"The machine" - previous post in this series described, more or less, Ray Dalio's trade networks.
However, Dalio's machine is even bigger than the trade networks alone.
1. The Trade Networks Are Part of the Machine
The shipping lanes, ports, payment systems, banks, contracts, insurance markets and supply chains are the plumbing.
They allow:
- Oil to move
- Food to move
- Components to move
- Money to move
- Information to move
Without them, the modern economy would seize up very quickly.
2. The Machine Includes Several Interlocking Systems
Dalio tends to view the world as a collection of interacting systems:
- The economic machine
- The credit machine
- The monetary machine
- The political machine
- The geopolitical machine
Each influences the others.
For example:
A container ship leaves Shanghai carrying goods.
That is trade.
The shipment is financed by banks.
That is credit.
The payment is settled in dollars.
That is money.
The route passes through strategic waters protected by navies.
That is geopolitics.
The legal contracts are enforced by governments.
That is politics.
All of these together form the machine.
3. Relating This to The Three Layers
The machine sits underneath all three layers.
Layer 3
- Derivatives
- Futures
- Options
depend on
Layer 2
- Shares
- Bonds
- Financial claims
which depend on
Layer 1
- Production
- Resources
- Labour
- Energy
which depend on
The Machine
- Trade routes
- Banking systems
- Energy systems
- Legal systems
- Governments
- Military protection
- Social stability
Without the machine, the layers above cannot function.
4. A Useful Analogy
Think of a theatre.
The actors on stage
- Shares
- Bonds
- Derivatives
These are what investors see every day.
Behind the stage
- Factories
- Farms
- Mines
- Energy systems
These produce the real output.
Underneath the entire building
- Shipping networks
- Banking networks
- Governments
- Laws
- Currencies
- Security arrangements
These are the foundations.
Most people watch the actors.
Dalio spends much of his time studying the foundations.
5. An Interesting Extension
- Physical assets
- Energy
- Agriculture
- Commodities
- Infrastructure
- Geopolitics
The recent series of posts have gradually moved attention downward through the layers.
Many investors spend all their time analysing Layer 3.
Some analyse Layer 2.
Dalio's framework, and these recent posts, ask:
"What supports the entire structure?"
That question leads directly to:
- Trade networks
- Energy systems
- Monetary systems
- Debt systems
- Geopolitical power
In other words, the machine itself.
Glossary
Economic Machine - Dalio's term for the interconnected system through which production, spending, credit and wealth creation occur.
Plumbing - Informal term for the underlying infrastructure that allows a financial or economic system to operate.
System - A collection of interconnected parts whose behaviour depends on their interactions rather than on any single component.
Foundation Layer - The underlying institutions and physical networks upon which economic and financial activity depends.
5/6 THE THREE LAYER ECONOMIC MACHINE AND CAPITAL ROTATION
Capital migration between these three layers.
Layer 1: The Physical Economy
- Energy
- Agriculture
- Water
- Metals
- Infrastructure
- Manufacturing
- Real estate
- Transport
These are tangible assets and productive activities. They satisfy physical human needs.
Layer 2: Financial Claims
- Shares
- Bonds
- ETFs
- Investment funds
- Bank deposits
These are claims on Layer 1 assets and cash flows.
Layer 3: Financial Abstractions
- Futures
- Options
- Swaps
- Structured products
- Leverage
- Synthetic exposures
These are claims on claims.
What makes your recent series interesting is that it can be interpreted as a story of capital moving down the pyramid.
Historically, during periods of stability, capital often moves upward:
Physical assets → Shares → Derivatives
Investors become increasingly comfortable holding paper claims because they trust:
- Governments
- Financial institutions
- Currency systems
- International trade networks
The financial layers expand faster than the underlying physical economy.
However, during periods of uncertainty, the process can reverse:
Derivatives → Financial Assets → Physical Assets
Investors begin asking:
"Who actually owns something real?"
That question has appeared repeatedly throughout history.
Examples include:
- The inflationary 1970s
- Weimar Germany
- Argentina's recurrent crises
- Russia in the 1990s
- Various emerging market currency crises
In each case, confidence in paper claims weakened and ownership of tangible assets became more attractive.
A useful image for readers is this:
The Pyramid of Claims
Layer 3: Claims on claims (Futures, options, swaps)
↓
Layer 2: Claims on assets (Shares, bonds)
↓
Layer 1: Assets themselves (Land, energy, food, metals, factories)
The lower one moves in the pyramid, the closer one gets to physical reality.
The higher one moves, the greater the reliance on trust, law, liquidity and financial stability.
This also ties directly into your recent theme of:
"The Rotation from Financials to Physicals."
The argument is not necessarily that financial assets become worthless.
Rather, it is that after decades in which Layers 2 and 3 expanded much faster than Layer 1, investors may increasingly favour ownership linked to scarce physical resources.
That is essentially the story behind:
- Gold
- Silver
- Copper
- Agriculture
- Energy
- Water infrastructure
- Commodity producers
- Real assets generally
Viewed this way, your three recent posts are really one larger narrative:
For forty years capital climbed the pyramid. Today there are signs that it may be starting to descend again.
Whether that proves correct remains to be seen, but it is a powerful framework because it links financialisation, globalisation, debt expansion and the renewed interest in tangible assets into a single coherent picture.
Glossary
Financialisation - The increasing importance of financial markets, financial institutions and financial instruments relative to the productive economy.
Real Assets - Physical assets with intrinsic utility or scarcity, such as land, energy resources, metals and infrastructure.
Derivative - A contract whose value depends upon another asset rather than direct ownership of that asset.
Liquidity - The ease with which an asset can be bought or sold without significantly affecting its price.
4/6 THREE LAYERS OF CAPITALISM
Wednesday, 3 June 2026
WHAT IS GLOBALISATION
WHY BIG GOVERNMENT IS SO BIG
Tuesday, 2 June 2026
3/6 ETFs FOR ROTATING INTO PHYSICAL ASSETS
Overview
For four decades capital flowed into financial assets as falling interest rates, rising debt and globalisation inflated stocks, bonds and property. Today the pendulum seems to be swinging back towards the physical economy.
Gold, energy, industrial metals, agriculture, infrastructure and water all sit at the foundation of modern civilisation, and growing scarcity is forcing investors to take notice.
This article examines the possible sequence of that rotation between physical asset classes, and explores the ETFs that provide exposure to the tangible assets in those classes.
Limits on Capital movement
Governments can limit financial freedom by restricting access to foreign currencies, limiting transfers abroad, taxing overseas investments, imposing withdrawal restrictions, requiring institutions to hold government debt, or making it harder to move savings outside the domestic financial system.
The common objective is to keep capital at home and help finance government borrowing at lower cost.
2/6 ROTATION FROM FINANCIAL INTO PHYSICAL - EFFECT OF HORMUZ CLOSURE
1/6 FINANCIALS V. PHYSICALS
Sunday, 31 May 2026
SYSTEMS THINKING: SEEING THE MACHINE BENEATH EVENTS
4. Ray Dalio's "machine"
Ray Dalio frequently describes the economy as a "machine" because he wants people to think in terms of cause-and-effect relationships rather than isolated events. In his framework, individuals, businesses, banks, governments and central banks interact through flows of money, credit, spending, income and debt. Each participant responds to incentives and constraints, creating feedback loops that influence the behaviour of the whole economy. What emerges is not simply the sum of millions of individual decisions, but a dynamic system whose behaviour can often be understood through recurring patterns.
What makes Ray Dalio's macroeconomics so interesting is that he is concerned with the behaviour of the economy as a whole: growth, inflation, credit, debt cycles, interest rates, productivity, government spending and monetary policy....macroeconomics.
But his distinctive contribution is that he presents macroeconomics through a systems-thinking angle.
Traditional macroeconomics will study variables like GDP, unemployment, inflation and interest rates. Dalio goes a step further by emphasising the interactions and feedback loops between these variables. He asks questions such as:
• How does credit creation affect spending?
• How does spending affect income?
• How does income affect borrowing capacity?
• How does rising debt affect future spending?
• How do central bank actions alter the behaviour of the entire system?
From a systems-thinking perspective, Dalio's machine is essentially a system. It contains
• components (households, firms, banks and governments),
• processes (borrowing, lending, spending, investing and producing),
• inputs (labour, capital, resources and credit),
• outputs (goods, services, income and profits), and feedback loops (interest rates, asset prices, inflation and debt servicing costs).
The system evolves through time as today's outputs become tomorrow's inputs. Economic booms, recessions, debt crises and recoveries seen in this way are not isolated events, but emergent behaviours arising from the interaction of the system's many interconnected parts.
Machine - Dalio's term for a system whose behaviour can be understood through recurring cause-and-effect relationships.
System - a collection of interconnected components whose interactions produce outcomes that cannot be understood by examining the parts in isolation.
Feedback Loop - a process whereby the outputs of a system influence its future behaviour by becoming inputs into the next cycle.
Emergent Behaviour - patterns or outcomes that arise from interactions within a system rather than from any single component.









