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Does anyone view the recent stock market weakness in a similar light to crashes of 1929 & the 1990's tech bust.
In the 1920s people were investing with money they couldn't afford through broker loans. The world markets heavily relied on the US market conditions which showed extraordinarily high p/e ratios.
In the 1990's there was lots speculative buying based on the potential of success of the dot coms rather than based on success itself... Today I see similarities in that we have large volumes of borrowed funds in investment (margin loans etc), we have a market that seems heavily reliant on one area of the globe (that being the great expansion of the Chinese) and we have a large level of speculative buying within the Chinese markets with some phenominal p/e ratios and no solid history to back it up (but there's argument that potential is there).... What do you think?

2007-03-01 09:15:25 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Investing

4 answers

Similarity lies in what followed the big word R. In the 20's there was lot of speculative buying and the the economic policies initiated then after the stockmarket crash actually were contractionary in nature and it created a Recession. In 87 the black mondy and there was a small recession in 89. In 2000 again there was a mild recession after the stock market crash. The 27th February carsh must have been caused by Mr. Alan Greenspan's prediction about the American economy and the R word can or might not occur since the Fed is all more knowledgable about avoiding recession now.

2007-03-02 03:38:26 · answer #1 · answered by Mathew C 5 · 0 0

times have changed since 29 (and the dot com bust as well) the Nymex has shutdown procedures if the market seriously tanks. But otherwise you are pretty much right stupid people borrow money to invest and they wind up losing everything plus the fact they want to chase the hottest trend right now. which means the Chinese and Japanese markets and they are getting roasted right now. I have stop losses on my entire portfolio and if this trend continues I'll be on the sidelines by mid next week.

This is why you diversify invest in multiple areas. I'm not even the least bit worried about the market right now.

2007-03-01 14:42:30 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If I bear in mind wisely, the inventory marketplace crashed in 1986. It grow to be in some strategies worse than the crash of 1929. yet no longer something lots got here approximately to the prevalent man or woman. curiously the circumstances that created the catastrophe of 1929 have been corrected. quite a few traders recognized the loss as a "paper loss;" i.e. the inventory is worth much less, in spite of the undeniable fact that it is not substantial in case you do no longer sell it. In time, the inventory might bypass up back. And it did. I heard extremely some human beings of modest potential that reported they have been procuring inventory after the crash, because of fact they knew the cost might bypass up now.

2016-11-26 22:46:56 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I think you are right, but I don't think that there will be a lot of suicides this time like there was in 1929.

2007-03-01 11:11:22 · answer #4 · answered by Nelson_DeVon 7 · 0 0

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