1) Irrational exuberance is temporary. Gains rooted in economic productivity are real and permanent and can be counted on to finance a retirement or some other important financial goal. Irrational ...
Monday marks 20 years since former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan remarked on investors' "irrational exuberance," a phrase now synonymous with a market that appears overvalued. Greenspan said ...
Not all stock gains are real. When price increases push the CAPE value above its fair-value level (17), those price increases are irrational exuberance, not the true and lasting gains that are ...
On this day in economic and financial history. . . The phrase "irrational exuberance" first entered the economic lexicon on Dec. 5, 1996, in a speech by Alan Greenspan, then the chairman of the ...
REPUBLICAN IRRATIONAL EXUBERANCE? You can feel it — Republican confidence in victory is growing. Many in the GOP, from elected officials to pundits on Twitter, believe former President Donald Trump is ...
It's been 17 years since former Fed chief Alan Greenspan coined the term irrational exuberance, but frothy valuations are once again making the market look top-heavy. It's been more than 17 years ...
Signs of irrational exuberance in the technology sector are becoming evident, with certain parts of the market trading significantly above trend. The recently launched Destiny Tech100 closed-end fund ...
‘IRRATIONAL EXUBERANCE’: HAS THE RACE REALLY CHANGED? It has now been two weeks since President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and Vice President Kamala Harris became the presumptive Democratic ...
Irrational exuberance is the term ex-Fed chairman, Alan Greenspan used during the dot-com bubble of the 1990s to signal that the stock market, led by tech IPOs, might be overvalued. We're about to ...
There are two types of stock gains. There are real gains, which are rooted in economic productivity, and there is irrational exuberance, which is rooted in investor emotionalism. Set forth... There ...