The First Rule in a Stock Market Bubble

The first rule in a stock market bubble is, you don’t talk about the stock market bubble… Unless you want it to pop. Stock market bubbles form when stocks rise beyond their true value.
Investors are comparing the current market to the dot-com stock bubble between 1995-2000. Many of the tech companies that fuelled the dot-com bubble were highly overvalued, unprofitable, and outright terrible businesses.
The dot-com bubble popped in March 2000, sending hundreds of stocks down 80-90%. Two main factors led to the burst: the fed raised interest rates to control stock prices and Wall Street analysts began advising against tech stocks.
Are we in a bubble today?
Louis Gave, CEO of Gavekal Research, argues that there isn’t a bubble in the whole market but there may be one in big tech companies. Here are several similarities that can be seen between the dot-com bubble and today:
In the no-bubble side of the argument, tech stocks may not be as overvalued as they were in the dot-com bubble:
Stephen Suttmeier, chief equity strategist at Bank of America, believes a record $4.6t held in money funds could eventually be invested back into risky assets that could further fuel the stock market rally.
We talked about several hedging techniques in recent issues including diversification and gold investments. That being said, another way to benefit from rising stock prices and prepare for a potential crash is to hold a portion of your portfolio in cash. In the chance of another market crash or pull back, one can buy up stocks at a discount.