by Vexed » Wed 04 May 2005, 18:09:27
Leanne wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ll the dot-com money has flowed into real estate. The exuberance is just as irrational. We've basically traded one bubble for another.
Just one bubble?
From the Los Angeles Times, April 26th, Tom Petruno writes:
"Five years from now, what will the reasonable people of 2010 recall as the great bubble of 2005?
Or will they have trouble picking just one?
The housing market has become the most discussed candidate for bubblehood this year. But unlike in 2000, when the dot-com mania had no peers, housing has some stiff competition on the financial gasp-o-meter.
The commodities market, led by oil, has had many bubble earmarks — not least a near-vertical ascent in prices until recently.
The booming Chinese economy has been slapped with the bubble label. The record U.S. trade deficit, partly an effect of China's boom, also looks bubbly in that economists say it can't keep growing, yet it does.
Some Wall Street veterans say the global bond and mortgage markets may constitute the scariest bubble of all, as investors and lenders have fallen over themselves to extend credit to companies and individuals at generously low interest rates. The creditors may come to regret it if the economy slows and many borrowers can't pay their bills.
Recently, fear of an economic slowdown left some investors wondering whether the stock market also deserved to be lumped back in the bubble camp after two years of hefty gains. Despite gaining 206 points last Thursday, the Dow Jones industrial average has seen six losing days, including four 100-point losses, in the last nine sessions.
Given that each of the bubble candidates can be linked to one another with less effort than a game of Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon, it might be reasonable to suppose they represent one mega-bubble — the totality of our economic and financial world."