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The 1990s were a magical, optimistic time for technology, marked by the end of the Cold War and a booming economy. This era saw the rise of the Internet, a groundbreaking technology that connected ...
The Moneyist America’s job market is eerily similar to the 1990s dot-com bubble — and, yes, it’s a worry March 20 marks the 25th anniversary of the dot-com bust.
By November that year, the index had fallen below 3,000 points. Profit-taking, nose-diving investor sentiment, and a reappraisal of the late 1990s dot-com boom all combined to dent equity markets.
Profit-taking, nose-diving investor sentiment, and a reappraisal of the late 1990s dot-com boom all combined to dent equity markets. It would take years for the Nasdaq to reach its previous ...
The late 1990s made one thing clear: Using breakthrough technology isn’t enough. The companies that survived the dot-com crash weren’t chasing hype — they were solving real problems and ...
The current market setup mirrors the late 1990s Dot-Com bull market, with disruptive AI technology, money creation, and investor fear driving growth. AI tools, especially transformer-based LLMs ...
A legendary investor who predicted the dot-com crash says there's a key ingredient missing for a market bubble. Matthew Fox . Fri, Jan 17, ... internet stocks in the 1990s, ...
Greg Jensen, co-CIO of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates, said the current stock-market enthusiasm around artificial intelligence is different from the dot-com bubble that burst 24 years ago.
The dot-com bubble collapsed in March 2000, and the S&P 500 declined 49% by October 2002. Could the AI boom cause a similar stock market crash? New technologies tend to follow the Gartner Hype Cycle ...
In the late 1990s, prime-age labor-force participation was more than 81%. In January, it was also just shy of 81%. Full wage growth was 3% in the late 1990s, compared with just over 4% currently.