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Strategies & Market Trends : The New Economy and its Winners

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Bill Harmond
To: Glenn Petersen who wrote (57331)6/7/2015 4:15:40 PM
From: Ahda1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) of 57684
 

  • During the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s, companies often went public within a few years of being founded, and their stock prices doubled or tripled soon after their initial public offerings. Now, a greater share of such gains is being reaped by investors before the offering.

    As a result, the amount of money flowing into late-stage investing has swollen, and the value of such investments has sometimes ballooned as unicorn valuations have shot up. Wellington Management, for one, is raising a fund devoted to late-stage investments.

    If our entire economy was ballooning at the same rate as IPO's we would be seeing increased interest rates as inflation would be seen in nut and bolts end of the economy not just in our stock market. Paper traded for actual currency but that currency is tied to paper with hopes the asset not yet created will be created and equal the value it has been accessed at I wonder if SPACs are contagious?

    Bubbles shine as they fly in the wind . Gold shine too but I guess because gold is heavier than air it does not pop quite as fast as hot air bubbles do.
    I hope the G 7 can do something for Greece
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