Bridgewater teamed up with State Street to finally launch an All Weather ETF based on their famous strategy. The ticker is ALLW. I review it here.
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If you’ve landed here, Bridgewater and Ray Dalio’s famous All Weather Portfolio strategy likely need no introduction. Ray Dalio is regarded as one of the smartest minds in investing and Bridgewater is the world’s largest hedge fund, aiming to deliver steady, appreciable returns while limiting volatility and risk in virtually any market environment.
The All Weather ETF was designed to do exactly that, based on Bridgewater’s core strategy. Previously, you had to either be able to invest with Bridgewater themselves, or create your own version of Dalio’s proposed All Weather Portfolio for retail investors using a handful of about 5 different funds. Now this uber-popular allocation strategy is available in a single ETF straight from the horse’s mouth, making it more easily accessible.
ALLW launched in early 2025 and roughly a year later it has amassed over $1B in assets, likely due mostly to Bridgewater’s reputation alone. This has been a big win for State Street, who have been more interested in launching alternative funds the past few years. It’s simultaneously a win for Bridgewater too, whose AUM has dwindled significantly since Dalio stepped away from the helm.
To briefly summarize the strategy, ALLW diversifies broadly across different assets globally to aim to minimize volatility and risk while delivering smoothed returns above that of T-bills. This makes it popular for retirees and risk-averse investors who are more concerned with large drops and swings than with outsized returns.
Bridgewater teamed up with State Street Global Advisors to create the SPDR Bridgewater All Weather ETF. SSGA acts as the adviser and Bridgewater is the sub-adviser. The ALLW ETF aims to follow a daily model portfolio created by Bridgewater that will typically span global stocks, nominal and inflation-linked bonds, and commodities, though SSGA has the freedom to deviate from Bridgewater’s suggestions.
“We believe a diversified asset allocation is a great step in preparing for the future, and we are excited to broaden access to our approach with an innovative organization like State Street Global Advisors,” Karen Karniol-Tambour, co-chief investment officer of Bridgewater Associates.
Expect allocations for ALLW to vary at any given time, but at the time of writing, using round numbers, they are roughly:
43% global stocks
73% global nominal treasury bonds
41% U.S. inflation-linked bonds (TIPS)
23% broad commodities
10% gold
Source: SSGA
These weights will shift, but the presence or absence of the assets will not change. Leverage is also not used tactically to try to time the market here; it will remain constant. So while this is certainly considered an actively managed ETF, it may not be as active as it sounds at first glance.
If you did some napkin math, you’ll see leverage is nearly 2x, which is not insignificant, especially when we’ve got a hefty dose of bonds. Leveraged fixed income has not been kind in recent years, and has resulted in major outflows from the risk parity fund category. Wealthfront even closed its famous risk parity product entirely in early 2025.
Ironically, that same leveraged fixed income aspect allowed this strategy to perform exceptionally well in the early 2000’s. The Dotcom bubble and GFC were the perfect storm through which such a strategy was able to shine.
Target volatility is listed as 10-12%, compared to about 15% historically for the stock market. Realized volatility of ALLW has been right at 12% since inception looking through February, 2026, over which short time period it has delivered on its promise of superior risk-adjusted return:
Click to enlarge.
Also appreciate how this specific portfolio differs pretty substantially from the armchair retail version of the All Weather Portfolio that Dalio delineated in an interview with Tony Robbins, which lacks TIPS entirely.
At this point you may be reminded of the RPAR ETF, an earlier translation of basically the same “all weather” approach, albeit with different allocations and different implementation. Recall that RPAR aims for a pretty modest 120% exposure, as opposed to about 190% here. ALLW is actually closer to UPAR, RPAR’s higher-octane brother.
Short timeframe aside, here’s how that comparison has shaken out thus far:
Click to enlarge.
With uncertainty seemingly on the rise, intentional investors targeting meaningful diversification to hedge adverse macroeconomic outcomes will likely enjoy what ALLW offers, as it allows the investor to avoid trying to predict anything. It also means you don’t have to try to be a global macro expert.
“We believe a resilient, well-balanced diversified portfolio to prepare for a wide range of economic environments can be critical for investors to achieve their goal of wealth accumulation,” said Anna Paglia, chief business officer at State Street Global Advisors.
The ALLW ETF aims to deliver that resilience by equally balancing risk exposure to Dalio’s four proposed economic seasons. Different assets are expected to perform well in each season of rising growth, falling growth, rising inflation, and falling inflation. Dalio refers to these regimes collectively as the “Big Cycle” and explains them in detail in his book Principles for Dealing With the Changing World Order.
This specific equal weighting is called risk parity, with respect to equally weighting each season. This strategy from Bridgewater is about 30 years old at this point.
ALLW takes that equally weighted basket and then overlays leverage – borrowing to increase exposure – to enhance returns. Ideally this should result in greater long-term risk-adjusted returns compared to something like 100% stocks or even the classic 60/40.
As a result of all this, we would consider ALLW a hedge fund ETF. That may sound enticing or off-putting, depending on your perspective. In any case, note that ALLW’s performance will not at all resemble that of the S&P 500, for better or worse.
This all weather strategy implicitly assumes that different assets have similar historical risk-adjusted returns, that macroeconomic environments can be reduced to four quadrants, and that the included assets will remain at least reasonably uncorrelated in times of turmoil. Of course, none of these are guaranteed. One can easily imagine scenarios where assets converge or where one or multiple assets can have long stretches of poor performance, potentially dragging down the strategy. 2022 was a decent example of this.
Inexperienced investors will likely knee-jerkily shy away from ALLW’s relatively low allocation to stocks, or they’ll buy and then won’t be able to stick with the diversified strategy over the long term after seeing certain individual components soar over short periods. These are behavioral challenges that can make or break investing plans.
And of course, leverage also introduces an additional layer of risk and complexity, and borrowing costs can eat into returns. Fundamentally, institutional strategies haven’t always behaved as expected historically once they’re shoved into a single ETF. Only time will tell if the ALLW packaged portfolio is able to deliver on its thesis.
A pretty big downside of this fund is the cost. ALLW costs 0.85%, which is pretty high compared to similar global multi-asset funds in this space, compared to RPAR which costs 0.51%, and especially compared to a DIY implementation using a handful of highly liquid, low-cost index funds to reasonably replicate what ALLW is doing.
However, you’re mostly paying for the Bridgewater pedigree here, along with a bit of complexity, and instituional lending rates for nearly 2x leverage, so it’s a bit of a toss up.
So naturally, now we need to talk about what a DIY version might look like. A self-contained DIY translation with leverage embedded in the ETFs is basically impossible to create for these allocations and these assets, so the only way to realistically recreate ALLW would be to use a normal scaled-down version and then ratchet up the leverage holistically yourself via margin in a taxable brokerage account.
However, remember that bonds and commodities are not very tax-friendly, and periodic rebalancing would create taxable events. Whether or not that tax impact would outweigh ALLW’s fee is up for debate. In any case, approach the DIY idea with caution.
But then, as you can imagine, the ETF itself also has significant turnover and thus a pretty hefty tax cost, so neither option is ideal for taxable space.
That scaled-down version without leverage would look like this, basically cutting the fund’s allocations in half:
23% global stocks
38% global nominal treasury bonds
21% U.S. inflation-linked bonds (TIPS)
12% broad commodities
6% gold
Using mostly low-cost index funds, we can construct that portfolio like this:
VT – 23%
GOVT – 20%
IGOV – 18%
SCHP – 21%
BCI – 12%
IAUM – 6%
I’ve created that pie for M1 Finance here if you want to invest in it.
Such a translation would have an expense ratio of 0.13%. You’d then need to use margin to ratchet up nearly 2x to get close to what ALLW is doing. Also keep in mind you won’t be able to directly see Bridgewater’s daily model that gets sent to State Street.
Like I noted with RPAR, ALLW will likely be attractive to advisors because it allows them to put clients in a well-balanced institutional strategy on autopilot, thereby freeing up time to focus on other aspects of comprehensive financial planning.
It’s also cool that ALLW is another avenue by which retail investors can now access a pre-packaged solution for a strategy that was once only available to the ultra-wealthy.
Curiosity and speculation abound. Bridgewater may be incidentally cannibalizing its own hedge fund products by providing a cheaper, watered down sample of its internal secret sauce directly to retail investors. It also may hurt Bridgewater’s reputation if the ALLW ETF – which proudly boasts the Bridgewater All Weather branding – clearly diverges significantly from its own funds. On the other hand, a close adherence would inadvertently give competitors more of an inside look into Bridgewater’s proprietary ideas. Only time will tell.
What do you think the ALLW ETF? Let me know in the comments.
Disclosures: None.
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