Thursday, 11 June 2009

Bubble lessons never go out of style

Bubble lessons never go out of style, and not only are going to help you with big bubbles, or individual stock bubbles, but will focus you on which information is real and what is perception in almost all of your investing. Learn the lessons well.

With bubbles, there is an element of mystery. To cope with that, start with the first step, knowledge, and combine that with your disiciplined buy and sell strategies, since in a bubble it is likely that the beliefs of the crowd cannot be supported by real knowledge.

A considerable number of people (but not all) in the investment community regarded a wide range of technology, communications, and internet stocks as having almost unlimited demand for their products and unlimited potential - all of which assumptions proved to be incorrect. Yet the entire crowd thought in this way about many Internet companies because of incorrect and incomplete information. Emotions temporarily filled that void. A disciplined buy and sell strategy helps you control your emotion.

The other big factor in irrational behaviour comes when the crowd is deliberately fooled, so some bubbles are either accompanied by or built upon fraud or swindles. In the 2000 Internet bubble, the atmosphere of greed it created did bring out the worst in a number of executives who engaged in what proved to be criminal behaviour, either outright stealing from their companies (as executives of Tyco International and Adelphia Communications did), or engaging in accounting and financial fraud (which is what Bernie Ebbers, WorldCom's chairman was convicted of in March 2005.)

There were 3 bubbles that burst in 2000, and they wer all related to one another.
  1. The first was the most obvious: the stock market bubble, which had component bubbles in Internet, telecommunications, and various technology stocks. The excitement over those took almost all other stocks into overvaluation.
  2. The second was the bubble in capital spending by corporations in the great telecommunications build-out that was going to accommodate all the new traffic, create broadband access for most businesses and consumers, and handle all the new uses of the Internet. The same beliefs that caused stocks to soar were also driving this corporate capital spending, since the new information about the potential of all sorts of technologies appeared to offer great opportunities. Ultimately, the Internet has proved to be a transforming force (just as, say, the railroads, were in the nineteenth century in Europe) and is changing business and life for many people. Thus, not everything that created the mania was false, and this fact just compounded the confusion.
  3. The third bubble was the overall U.S. economy, which reached peak growth rates that wer more than twice the long-term average real growth. The other two bubbles caused that to happen, so when stocks came down, lower stock values and fear caused consumers and corporations to spend less. The biggest effect on the economy was the loss of the part of corporate spending that had been directed into telecommunications, since that was an incredibly large part of the overall picture.

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