| ▲ | michaelmrose 2 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Because traditionally the pop is delayed while those who realized most of the gains attempt to offload the risk to other parties. Whether this works or not at some point it becomes an inevitable and self reenforcing feedback loop. Just investing less in risky things on the run up means you personally perform worse so even in known bubbles you don't see reasonable slow downs instead of disastrous pops. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | JumpCrisscross an hour ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
> traditionally the pop is delayed while those who realized most of the gains attempt to offload the risk to other parties What? Source? Plenty of investment bubbles pop before the bag is passed. This thread involves a lot of people looking at something they don't like and presuming karmic forces will give them what they deserve. There is no reason these companies, even if massively overvalued, have to "pop." That's fundamentally different from e.g. the financial crisis, or the 2023 bank collapses, or even the dot-com bubble. Those did not have the ability to self correct. There was no slow deflation other than through a bailout. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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