Signs Of Excess Flashing Across Growth Stocks

 | Dec 08, 2021 03:34PM ET

Those with significant money invested in 2000 remember what happened to them back then. They lost the bulk of their money.

Investors certainly heard the warnings in the late 1990s, but they did not listen. Words of caution fell like silent raindrops. It was a “new economy.” Companies did not need to show profits. They needed to embrace the dot-com handle and get listed on an exchange.

Non-profitable businesses offered shares on the NASDAQ 100. Prices skyrocketed instantly. And participants with cryptocurrency-like zealotry got rich. (For a while, anyway.) Dot-com stocks began to crash in March of 2000. Shortly thereafter, profitable tech corporations followed suit. And eventually, the rest of the stock market tanked.

A similar phenomenon may be in the works today. Non-profitable tech quadrupled (400%) during the pandemic. However, it has been on a bearish track since early in 2021.