The Mother Of All Bubbles Is Here



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in terms of the MAGNITUDE of the Japanese Market Bubble – and, how that compares with the United States – here’s what you need to know:

From 1990 through 2003…the Nikkei fell 80% as Japan’s entire economy was completely turned upside down – but, one thing that most people don’t mention is the EXACT MAGNITUDE of JUST how big that bubble was, before it popped.

For example – it was reported that, from 1956 to 1986, “land prices increased 5000%… even though consumer prices only doubled in that time.” Share prices also increased “3x faster than corporate profits,” by 1990… “total Japanese property market was valued at over 2,000 trillion yen, which was roughly 4x the real estate value of the entire United States”…and, the most shocking from ALL of this: “In 1989 the P/E ratio on the Nikkei was 60x trailing 12 month earnings.”

Just for comparison…the PE Ratio of the SP500 is currently around 20…which, is is higher than it’s average of 16…but, not unreasonably high when compared throughout history.
https://www.multpl.com/s-p-500-pe-ratio

Just to put that in perspective….when you view this in comparison to the 2001 Dot Com bubble…Japan traded at a value that was nearly 3x HIGHER, where “a $100,000 investment in Japanese large cap stocks in 1970 would have turned into $5.7 million by 1989, and $100,000 in small caps would have grown to $18.3 million dollars.” If we applied the same metrics today, with the US Market…the SP500 would be trading at nearly 9000…so, that should give you a good understanding that this bubble was MASSIVE to the point where – yeah, no wonder it still hasn’t recovered after 30 years.

As for my OWN thoughts – here’s the thing: MOST LIKELY, if we DO have a “lost decade” where the stock market is trading at the same price as today, 10 YEARS FROM NOW…realistically, it’s not going to be the same price, consistently, the entire time. For example, it’s not like the SP500 would just trade between 3900 and 4200 for 10 years and that’s it…that’s NEVER happened, and most likely, there’s going to be a lot of ups and downs along the way. 

It’s also HIGHLY unrealistic to assume that you’re just going to make ONE single investment, at one point in time…and then NOTHING ever again…and, sure, I’ll admit – IF you did that, and never invested afterwards…you might very well lose money. But, again – chances are, investing is going to be something you CONSISTENTLY do year after year…and that’s how you can make sure you stay profitable.  

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  1. This guy Graham.. all his trying to do is get u to keep investing and buying more stocks. He says that we are in a bad situation but is not as bad as Japan’s worse collapse.. fxcking joke!! If he can convince you, I guess he is doing a great job 👏

  2. I see a lot of folks are annoyed with the "clickbait" titles, but I don't really see it that way. I see it as Graham taking the fearmongering headlines and rumors from popular media and converting it to a rational, evidence based response. When i see Graham's titles, I already know he's not going to just rant about what's in the title to pump fear into the viewer. Instead
    I think, oh good, he's addressing that idea that I've been hearing a lot about lately. So in that sense, it works for me, but mostly because i know Graham produces high quality content, regardless of the title.

  3. Graham. Good stuff. I am a new subscriber. So, I hear you on the stock market and economy. What about real estate? You touched on it very little. If I have some cash, is it a good time to buy into RE or hold on to it as that bubble is about to pop too?

  4. We just sold a property and for the first time have a noteworthy pile of cash (roughly 30% net worth) We have a solid amount invested in real estate and retirement but want to diversify into a few etfs for something more liquid. Some days I think this is perfect timing and sometimes I think it’s scary timing. Should we go all in? Put it in chunk by chunk incrementally? We plan to contribute to these funds monthly. Any thoughts/advice?

  5. Unsure about everyone else, but if this is in fact the mother of all bubbles, bring it on! I cannot wait to simply have the market is disarray to follow through on a good old investors' perspective to "be fearful when the market is greedy and GREEDY WHEN THE MARKET IS FEARFUL," I am all in on buying the dip and embracing the volatility!

  6. Unsure about everyone else, but if this is in fact the mother of all bubbles, bring it on! I cannot wait to simply have the market is disarray to follow through on a good old investors' perspective to "be fearful when the market is greedy and GREEDY WHEN THE MARKET IS FEARFUL," I am all in on buying the dip and embracing the volatility!

  7. My advice is always to keep the majority in ETFs that cover multiple sectors. Then have a couple stocks, as a small percentage, picked out that you feel personally attached to or interested in. That way you can mitigate a lot of the risk but also have a personal touch to your portfolio. I feel this mitigates some of the emotional downsides or disinterest people have with investing. Also helps with the urge to constantly buy/sell with fluxes in the market. At this point I'm grateful I have an adviser, Susan Kay Mack . Credits to her, it has been a year and half of steady growth

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