Bubbles, Bubbles and More Bubbles

December 30th, 2009

Par for the course in Fiat Currency Hell.

Via: AP:

A string of exploding investment bubbles that started with the dot-coms and ended with mortgages and oil dominated the years from 2000 to 2009. And it looks like the next decade will be no different.

It doesn’t seem to matter to many hedge fund traders and other professional investors that the Standard & Poor’s 500 index has turned in its first losing performance over the course of a decade, having fallen 23 percent from 1,469.25 at the start of 2000 to its current 1,126.20. Or that they or other investors helped create and then destroy the bubbles that left stocks worth $2.5 trillion less today than when the decade began — and that’s before adding in the effects of inflation.

A mix of investor hubris, ignorance and piles of easy money created the bubbles. New ideas about where to invest seemed foolproof and greed crowded out doubts. Many investors looking for the best returns failed to see the potential problems with an Internet business that had no sales plan, or that thousands of expensive homes bought with no down payment might end up in foreclosure.

Now, these investors who fled the last blowups risk running smack into others. The Federal Reserve is keeping borrowing costs low to help revive the economy, and that means there’s still plenty of easy money around, helping traders to inflate the price of everything from stocks to commodities such as gold.

“They’ve put out the biggest punch bowl in U.S. history and people are guzzling from it,” said Haag Sherman, chief investment officer at Salient Partners in Houston.

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