MarketWatch recently ran a piece titled The next 10 investment
bubbles by Wallace Witkowski, and I thought this would make a nice
follow-up to last week's commentary on the Two-Term Presidential Curse
where two-term presidencies appear to end in bubbles and busts.
Bubble
# 1: U.S. Stocks: The U.S. bull market is now almost five years old
with the S&P 500 up 170% since its March 2009 low. The last 10%
correction ended in June 2012 and the S&P is up another 40% since...
and while corrections normally reset markets, what's different this
time is the environment of extremely low interest rates
and the $85 billion in monthly stimulus that's fueling the rally in
stocks. Of course, solid earnings have also reassured investors but talk
of the Fed slowly ramping down its stimulus - is beginning to worry
some market watchers. However, there are many like Warren Buffett who
don't think stocks are overvalued at current levels.
Bubble # 2: Momentum stocks: Now - there most definitely are a few stocks such as Tesla
Motors and Facebook, to name a few that have surged beyond
fundamentals. Over the past year, Tesla is up about 336% and Facebook is
up about 135% with many analysts in agreement that shares of momentum
stocks such as these have risen to levels well above fundamental value.
Bubble
# 3: Bitcoin: Some of you may have heard of Bitcoin - an alternative
currency not controlled by central banks (which adds to its allure). As
you would expect many, including the underworld, like Bitcoins as a
nationless currency in which they can freely transact business
away from government controlled banks. Believe it or not, bitcoin
prices are up almost 2,500% in 2013, with a gain of nearly 76% in
November alone to about $400 per Bitcoin... Even Internet giant Baidu
(China's Google) recently started accepting Bitcoins as payment for
services. Several Bitcoin startups have also received significant
venture funding - so something new is afoot here.
Bubble # 4: Investment Grade
Scotch: Wow - who would've thought scotch whisky would make the list...
but turns out investors have significantly bid-up prices of rare
whiskies as a must-have collectible. A Scottish company that tracks
whisky auction
prices says prices have soared 170% since the end of 2008 with rare
scotches fetching four- and five-figure sums per bottle! Of course, high
prices have prompted many distilleries to release their own
limited-editions that could push up supply and cool prices... but
skeptics think prices could go even higher because newer limited
editions may not meet connoisseurs' high standards for a good scotch.
Okay, I'm going to collapse a few categories now in the interest of time, so here they are.
Bubbles #5 and 6: Property values in London and China: Property prices
are on a tear in London, with prices up 10% in October alone and set to
rise higher on positive UK economic data. London sees higher demand for
homes than supply, partly with turmoil in the Middle East driving money
into London property as a safe-haven investment. While rising interest
rates may curtail domestic demand, they're unlikely to dampen demand
from foreign moneybags.
Similarly, property prices in China were
up almost 11% in October - the highest growth rate since June 2011 -
reigniting fears of a fresh bubble and prompting the government to
tighten credit and stabilize growth. Lack of confidence in China's murky stock markets is also driving money into U.S. real estate that could well boost property prices at home.
Bubble
#7: U.S. Farmland: Prime U.S. farmland has seen a 20% jump in price
over the past year to $8,400 per acre - continuing steep upward gains
since the late 1980's, almost without a meaningful correction. Prices
are particularly high in the heartland where corn and soybean crops grow
well - with land price gains fueled by soaring commodity prices
and low interest rates. However, farmland prices look like they may
avoid a bust as commodity prices retreat from earlier highs and as interest rate increases weaken credit availability. So U.S. farmland appears to be headed for a smooth landing, not a crash.
Bubble #8: Cattle and beef futures:
Cattle futures are at an all-time high since November 1984, to $1.34
per pound from slightly over a dollar a pound at the beginning of the
year. Prices have spiked because - over the past few years - farmers
trimmed their herds due to droughts and high feed costs that made cattle
farming unsustainable. Now, supply lags demand, but rising beef prices
may slow beef consumption in favor of cheaper alternatives such as
chicken and pork. With feed prices dropping in 2013, ranchers may start
to build herds and stabilize supply and demand by the end of 2015 - so,
again, a crash is unlikely.
Bubble #9: Student loan
debt: Over the past ten years, federal student debt has tripled to over
$1 trillion in June 2013, with default rates rising sharply since the financial crisis in 2007 with jobs
hard to come by for new grads. Default rates are up from about 5% in
2007 to over 10% in 2012 and rising and even Ivy League grads are part
of the growing default trend.
Bubble #10: Tech start-ups,
IPOs: The market for IPOs has been very frothy of late with first day
gains of 100% in some cases. Of recent IPOs - Twitter is up 64% - to $42
from its IPO price of $26 - even though it is yet to report a profit.
Potbelly Corp., a sandwich restaurant chain, went public at $14 and now
trades at about $30, up over 100%. Encouraged by this highly receptive
market, many other start ups without profits - such as Chegg that just
went public on Wednesday - are also hitting the market - raising
hundreds of millions in cash and garnering billion-dollar valuations on
zero profits. It's sort of like the go-go dot-com days and many analysts
are wary of these eyebrow-raising valuations.
So there you have
it - 10 potential bubbles... which I plan to follow through the end of
Obama's term. And while we've identified these ten, I wouldn't be
surprised if there's something completely out of left field that hits us
and takes markets down... only time will tell.
The Next Ten Investment Bubbles
Posted by CB Blogger
Blog, Updated at: 11:14 PM
