Big Picture Thinking - AI Analysis Prompt
Use this Ray Dalio rule prompt to apply “Big Picture Thinking” to a specific company. It turns a vague opinion into a repeatable checklist: what facts you must verify, which assumptions matter most, what would invalidate the thesis, and the common misreads that create false certainty. Expect a written output you can save: a thesis summary, key risks, and next-step questions for filings and earnings calls. If a claim matters, require primary-source citations before you act. Educational only — not investment advice.
Full Prompt
You are an investment analyst trained in Ray Dalio's principle of "Big Picture Thinking." Your core philosophy: principles-based thinking, radical transparency, all-weather strategy. Your task is to analyze {Company Name} through the specific lens of this principle.
## Context
Ray Dalio teaches: "Don't get lost in the details. Always keep the big picture in mind and prioritize accordingly."
## Analysis Framework
### 1. Principle Application Assessment
- How does this principle specifically apply to {Company Name}?
- What aspects of the company are most relevant to "Big Picture Thinking"?
- Rate the company's alignment with this principle: Strong / Moderate / Weak
- What would Ray Dalio focus on first when evaluating this company?
### 2. Quantitative Evidence
- Identify 3-5 key financial metrics most relevant to this principle
- Analyze these metrics over the past 5-10 years for {Company Name}
- Compare with industry peers and historical benchmarks
- Are the numbers improving, stable, or deteriorating?
- What story do the numbers tell through the lens of "Big Picture Thinking"?
### 3. Qualitative Deep Dive
- Evaluate the non-quantifiable factors Ray Dalio would examine
- Management quality and alignment with this principle
- Industry dynamics and competitive position
- Business model sustainability viewed through this specific lens
- What would Ray Dalio want to know that isn't in the financial statements?
### 4. Risk Assessment Through This Lens
- What risks does this principle specifically highlight for {Company Name}?
- What could go wrong that this principle is designed to protect against?
- Are there warning signs that Ray Dalio would flag?
- Stress-test: How would this company perform under adverse conditions?
- What is the worst-case scenario from this principle's perspective?
### 5. Opportunity Identification
- What opportunities does analyzing through this lens reveal?
- Are there hidden strengths the market may be undervaluing?
- How does this company compare to Ray Dalio's ideal investment?
- What catalysts could unlock value related to this principle?
### 6. Dalio Verdict
- Summarize: Does {Company Name} pass the "Big Picture Thinking" test?
- Rate the investment opportunity: 1-10 from this principle's perspective
- Clear recommendation: Buy / Hold / Avoid (based on this principle alone)
- What conditions would change your assessment?
- One-paragraph summary capturing Ray Dalio's likely assessment
## Output Format
Present your analysis with specific data points in each section. Use Ray Dalio's analytical style: systematic macro analysis with principles-based decision framework. End with a decisive verdict.Related reading (close the loop)
Pick one path below to turn the output into a checkable, repeatable decision policy.
- Read the matching principleDefinition, boundaries, pitfalls, and a minimal checklist.
- Master profileMethodology summary + common misreads for this framework.
- Practice in scenariosTranslate conclusions into “what I do under stress”.
- More prompts from this masterTriangulate with multiple rules instead of anchoring on one prompt.
Educational only. Verify facts with primary sources and apply your own constraints.
Basic Questions
How does Dalio's big-picture thinking help understand the current economy?
🌍 Three levels of big-picture thinking:
1. Long-term debt cycle (50-75 years): Where are we in the cycle?
2. Rise and fall of empires: How does global power dynamics affect investing?
3. Monetary system evolution: What does changing dollar status mean?
📌 Investment implications:
- If we're at the end of a long-term debt cycle, traditional assets may all be unsafe
- Great power competition may turn certain industries (semiconductors, energy) into political targets
- Inflation and currency devaluation risks may be bigger than you think
Usage Tips
Is the AI's 1-10 rating reliable?
The rating's unique value:
- Helps you avoid "seeing the trees but missing the forest" — a company with excellent financials going against the macro tide faces enormous risk
- A high score means the company aligns with macro trends, but doesn't guarantee short-term price appreciation
- Comparing big picture scores across industry peers reveals who better captures the era's trends
Usage warnings:
- Big picture thinking can become a "grand narrative" trap — ensure every macro judgment is backed by concrete data
- AI's macro analysis may be overly linear; in reality, trends often develop non-linearly
- Being right on the big picture but wrong on timing can still lead to massive losses
Getting started
Does this prompt give investment advice or buy/sell calls?
What inputs should I provide for a reliable result?
Validation and boundaries
How do I validate the output?
When should I NOT act on the output?
More Rule Prompts
Explore other investment principles from this master.
Mistakes as Learning
Every time you make a mistake, you should be grateful because you have an opportunity to learn from it and improve.
→All-Weather Strategy
Structure your portfolio to perform well across all economic environments - growth, recession, inflation, and deflation.
→The Economic Machine
The economy works like a simple machine. Three main forces drive it: productivity growth, short-term debt cycle, and long-term debt cycle.
→Five-Step Process
Use the 5-Step Process to get what you want: 1) Set clear goals, 2) Identify problems, 3) Diagnose root causes, 4) Design solutions, 5) Execute.
→