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The DotCom Crash Revisited

woginuk writes "At 9:00pm GMT today , it will be exactly 5 years since the Nasdaq reached its highest level, 5048.62. From there on it has been downhill all the way. Most of us have been affected by it, one way or the other. The Guardian has a story looking back on the moment and succeeding events."

25 of 528 comments (clear)

  1. Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by SpaceCadetTrav · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The rampant speculation has moved right into real estate. Prepare for the next great crash, with greater consequences.

    1. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by winkydink · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, I moved to Silicon Valley in 1983. Back then everybody talked about how expensive houses were (a nice house was in the high 100-low 200k) and how overpriced the real estate market was. Save for a minor dip in the 90's housing prices have never fallen in 22 years. The median price in Santa Clara County (not where Larry Ellison & Steve Jobs live... where regular folks live) is $615k.

      --

      "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

    2. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
      The sequence of events to follow, from what I've read:

      1. Foreign countries decide propping up the dollar is a bad bet, and so start pulling out, slowly.
      2. Other countries see this and the acceleration begins, with no country wanting to be the last one holding dollars.
      3. The fall of the dollar continues, picking up speed.
      4. Interest rates get raised quickly to encourage foreign investment despite the weak dollar.
      5. The real estate market collapses.
      6. Taking the stock market with it.
      7. The U.S. economoy goes into recession.
      8. Bush White House continues spending on wars.
      9. The recession turns into a near-depression.
      10. The rich buy up houses and land and everything of value, at dirt-cheap prices.
      11. The U.S. is now a sharecropper economy, with 90% of the population being renters, and the rich being the owners.

    3. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by cmowire · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, it's the exact same thing.

      If you buy stock in... say... Google, there's a certain intrinsic value because, if they were to liquidate, they'd have their racks of hardware, their office space, etc. There's money to be hand to buy up the patents and trademarks and everything else...

      Much the same way as there's a certain intrinsic value in real estate. You need to remember that part of real estate is all about location, which is not intrinsic.

      In both cases, the price you pay is the intrinsic value of the item, plus all of the abstract hard-to-quantify stuff. If all of the tech firms moved out of Silicon Valley, there would be a lot less demand for land in the area, for example. The value of the property goes down, even though "they aren't making more land".

    4. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by Edward+Faulkner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Save for a minor dip in the 90's housing prices have never fallen in 22 years.

      That's precisely the kind of thinking that makes crashes possible. When everyone believes something is a safe bet, they discount risk more and more. Market phenomena often work themselves out over decades, which is beyond most people's attention span.

      Take stocks for example. From 1980 to 2001, stocks were the right place to be. When a trend lasts that long, it changes people's attitudes. In 1980, most people were very nervous about stocks, because they had spent the previous couple decades sucking.

      If you bought the Dow Jones in 1929, you had to wait until 1956 just to break even. And this isn't such a rare outlier. If you bought in 1966, you didn't break even until 1983. Once you include taxes and fees, it was more like the early 90s.

      It takes a while for attitudes to shift. Despite the bubble popping, lots of people still believe that their 401k is going to grow at 7-10% per year. That's not necessarily true anymore.

      America's economic fundamentals are troubling. We actually spend 5% more than we make. With no domestic savings to fund future growth (or even service our existing debts), we're dependent on foreign investors. And the foreign investors are getting very nervous as the dollar continues to slide.

      --
      "The danger is not that a particular class is unfit to govern. Every class is unfit to govern." - Lord Acton
    5. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by ZoneGray · · Score: 4, Insightful

      We had a real estate crash in 1991 and it sucked, even if you didn't own real estate.

      Don't hold your breath waiting for housing prices to drop more than a couple percent, anyway. And even then, mortgage rates would be high, so it would be difficult to take advantage.

      The key to success in real estate is simple: Buy Young.

      Buy a house as soon as you can manage it, put down as little as you can, get as big a mortgage as your paycheck can handle, and buy in the nicest part of town that you can afford. It can be a financial load at first, but as the years go by, it gets easier and easier; your mortgage payments are fixed as your income increases (even if you just make inflationary raises, after 20 years those mortgage payments become relatively small). And the mortgage interest deduction is one of the great ripoffs of all time, you might as well take advantage of it.

      I didn't buy young, to my eternal regret. I remember 20 years ago thinking, "$50,000? I could never pay that off." But if I had bought, I'd be living in a $400K house paying about $250/month for a mortgage.

    6. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble by badasscat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Much the same way as there's a certain intrinsic value in real estate. You need to remember that part of real estate is all about location, which is not intrinsic.

      Uh, last I checked, you buy a property in Manhattan, whatever happens to the real estate market, your property is still in Manhattan.

      Location is intrinsic. The value of that location is not intrinsic, but that value itself is linked to intrinsic, er, properties (for lack of a better word). For example, New York was built where it is because it is on top of one of the greatest natural harbors in the world. That is never going to change, so the value of a particular property in New York will likely not fluctuate all that wildly - it does have a certain intrinsic value based on physical properties of the location that will never be altered.

      Beyond that, I just don't think there is any comparison between real estate and stocks. When you buy a stock you are buying a piece of paper - you're no longer even buying the promise of dividends (which is why people used to buy stock), because most technology companies have chosen to forego dividends and instead reinvest that money into company growth. The unspoken expectation between company and investor is that eventually there will be a dividend payout and all that investing will have counted for something, but this expectation was sort of turned on its ear during the dot-com bubble and people started investing instead with nothing but the expectation that the stock would go up. They had no idea why they were actually doing it; it was not based on anything.

      Then we had the crash, which knocked some sense back into these people. Those who argued that you buy stock based on company fundamentals and not speculation were vindicated. Something similar could happen in real estate, but never on that scale because after all, when you buy real estate you are buying a tangible asset, not a piece of paper that is already priced based on the expected position of the company five, ten, even twenty years in the future.

      In both cases, the price you pay is the intrinsic value of the item, plus all of the abstract hard-to-quantify stuff.

      This is not at all true. When you buy stock you are not paying for the intrinsic value of anything. You are paying for the expected future intrinsic value of a company, based on its P/E ratio.

      To make stocks and real estate equivalent, a seller of a home or a piece of land would have to say to you "this home may only be worth $300,000, but I am going to charge you $2.4 million because that is what I believe it will be worth 20 years from now." Obviously, nobody buys real estate like this, but it is exactly the way people buy stocks. Stocks have a certain level of inherent speculation (even if you're buying "value" stocks, the P/E ratios are rarely less than 8 or so... with tech stocks they're usually more like 60 or 70), whereas real estate is always sold for what it's valued at today.

      So the prices of real estate can go up and down, but because there is little speculation involved (unless you're buying undeveloped land in the hope that it will eventually be developed), there is little risk of a sharp downturn. That's as true now as it ever was. I mean, people have been saying for 100 years that real estate is overpriced, but how much do you think an average home built in 1900 costs today compared to what it cost at that time? Real estate prices will only continue to rise over time because there are only so many places to live in this country and a lot more people both being born and moving in every day.

      Stock prices are really anybody's guess. They've trended upwards over time just as real estate has, but they've always been subject to severe corrections, bubbles and overall fluctuations than real estate has.

  2. Hysterical? by Onimaru · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Rob Hersov, then boss of Sportal - now vice-chairman of executive plane company NetJets - says the collapse was precipitated by nothing less than "mass market hysteria".

    Well, that's a little bit strong, don't you think? The .com collapse was really tragic, but it was far from unpredictable, hysterical, or preventable. Just basic macro economics -- when there are economic profits (not just accounting profits) in a market then entrance is encouraged, and when these profits dry up then the market participants take a while to come back down to equilibrium, just likePavlov's dogs took a good while to stop salivating when the dinner bell was rung.

    I more agreed with Julie:

    Julie Meyer, co-founder of First Tuesday, puts it this way: "It's not that I didn't think it was coming. It was that you never see the shape of things until it happens."

    Boy, how true did that turn out to be?

    --
    adam b.
  3. Everyone was guilty of hubris at the time by filmmaker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is a quote in that article by Rob Hersov that describes the way a lot of people felt at that time:

    "Those were incredibly heady days," he says. "Fun - absolutely. We thought we were making a difference. We thought we were getting out there, shaking things up, doing something no one had done before. We really were pioneers - buccaneers."

    That statement demonstrates the two truths of the dot com explosion: on one had, we really did make a difference - we built a huge IT infrastructure in, essentially, the blink of an eye. On the other hand, that statement is packed with the hubris and exaggerated sense of importance that also permeated the time.

    The analogy was often made in 2000/2001 of the Detroit auto industry and the development of the US national highway system. The same thing happened with scores (or maybe it was hundreds?) of companies popping up with the word "motors" in their name during the period. And now there are 3; the big 3 left in Detroit.

    Not only that, but barring e-Bay and a few other notables, the companies that made it out of the bubble are ones with unique brand names: Google, Amazon, Travelocity, Yahoo!, and GoDaddy.

    I also disagree with the apparent conclusion that there are no lone wolves anymore. The climate is better for a savvy lone wolf than it was even in 1997, I believe.

    Who came up with the e-Idea of e-Appending e-E to e-Everything anyway?

    1. Re:Everyone was guilty of hubris at the time by filmmaker · · Score: 4, Funny

      You're right.

      Most sincere e-pologies...

  4. It wasn't THE END by winkydink · · Score: 4, Informative

    only the End of the Beginning. Startups continue to get funded although they now have to have some reasonable idea of how they will actually make money. There was a report on the San Francisco public radio station yesterday that said that if you look at growth in Silicon Vally over the last 20 years and "flatten" (whatever that means) the growth around the bubble, Silicon Valley continues to grow at relatively the same pace as before.

    --

    "I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey

  5. What the Bubble Got Right by semaj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Paul Graham has an interesting essay on "What the Bubble Got Right". It's worth remembering that some of the companies that lost 90% of their value are still worth billions today - e.g. Yahoo.

    Looks like the server's smoking already - you can at least get the text from Google's cache.

    --
    Meep meep
  6. Looking back by gtrubetskoy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I remember there was a pretty interesting comparison to the railroad boom and bust posted here a couple of years back, unfortunately I couldn't find a link to it. I think the railroad boom came in two waves, the second boom started about 5 years after the first and was much larger, and the bust was more devastating too. So we could be in for another bubble soon.

    Also, here is an interesting read. I don't see the date on the article, but the wayback machine has it on Mar 2001, so it was probably written right at the peak.

  7. Just for fun by hackstraw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Read about the California Gold Rush, and mentally timeshift the dates and where appropriate substitute gold oriented things with computers.

    The biggest difference between the two is that California was not settled at the time and it was most difficult to get basic necessities. Otherwise, same shit different day. People think they can get something for nothing.

  8. Not all stocks crashed by ites · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Look at Apple's stock price over 5 years, for instance - it's higher now than it was at its peak in 2000.

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  9. Downhill all the way? by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't know about that; more like finding its proper level again. Take a look at a comparison between the NASDAQ (^IXIC) and the Dow Jones (^DJI) and you'll see what I mean.

    --
    UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  10. A day late... by Gzip+Christ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No, it was March 10th, 2000 when the NASDAQ peaked. Was this story submitted yesterday and the editors didn't bother to update the reference to the anniversary being today? The anniversary was yesterday.

  11. Dot Com Litigation by Shadow+Wrought · · Score: 4, Funny
    Before and after the DotCom Bubble Bursting I was working at a large law firm in Silicon Valley. Prior to the bubble, the corporate lawyers in our office were frantic with work. We were turning away work left and right while the litigators (whom I supported) were calm. Even before the Bubble went *POP* that dynamic was changing. We had less corporate work (fewer deals and IPOs) and the number of upset business folks were starting to make our litigators hop.

    At the time I thought it would be humorous to do my own IPO calld $2Bob.com*. There would be no business plan save that all of the money invested would be spent. The IPO sheet would also specifically state that investors should expect no return on their investment and that all of the money would be pissed away on quasi corporate frivolities. If I had been a corporate paralegal instead of a litigation paralegal I might have actually tried it;-)

    *The fact that "$" is invalid for a web address made it all the more entertaining to my young self;-)

    --
    If brevity is the soul of wit, then how does one explain Twitter?
  12. Tech needs tech people by Lysol · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have to say, after reading this article and Paul Grahm's I have to agree that if you're going to start a tech company - which almost any net company is - then you need tech people.

    When we (my partners and I) merged our startup with another leader in our industry, everything at first was rosy. But within a matter of months, the misunderstanding of not just our business but also our tech, ended up being responsible for everyone running for the door. I, the principal technology guy, was out the door in six months. And needless to say, our product was dropped from their system within a year. Today? The VC's pushed everyone out and the company assets and name were transferred (from San Francisco) to east coast ownership.

    Not to say I and many friends didn't have a good time during the days. In fact, when I headed off to a tech consulting company after the startup, I and my co-workers probably spent more time at parties than at the office. But, would I do that again? Probably not. While I'm still fond of the fast paced energy that was was it was back then, I look at ideas like Boo (jesus, esp those guys), Pets, and others of the time and think "ugh."

    But I'm still hopeful for business on the net only because it has such a global reach now. One of my partners and myself are at round two of our startup lives. We're targeting the same industry, but with completely different tools. And one noticable difference is we're seeking no funding at all - which is good and bad. Like Graham suggests, we're goin lean all the way and tech guys are running the show. However, after almost a year of development on my part, it's starting to wear and the mantra now is persistence.

    Everyone has their own story and unlike some I've come across, I'm glad the .com happened - I had a good time. I was probably one of the only ones who never got around to investing in it (in fact, I told companies I worked for I'd rather have cash over stock) so I didn't really lose anything. However, it was a pretty silly time and unless you had a really good idea with some good people behind it, then you probably deserved to fail. Asking if it'll ever happen again is like asking if the gold rush of the 1800's will ever happen again.

  13. Isn't Over Yet by mslinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Home prices have yet to crash. Everyone keeps talking about how we had a 'soft landing'... it was soft because of low interest rates that have allowed people who really can't afford housing to get into the game. Wait until the housing bubble pops. Then, we'll get what we should have got when techs crashed... it's gonna be painful, real painful. All one needs to do is read a bit of history to understand how insane real estate prices in America have become. American debt is at an all-time high. We owe way too much money. Home prices have been going up by 20 and 30% annually in many areas... pay checks haven't... is it just me, or do others find this odd?

  14. Re:Real Estate Bubble - Stock Bubble-Suicidal Econ by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Funny
    It's hard to "sell high" in a depressed economy. More like buy low, and sell lower.

    Ah yes, Decapitalism.

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  15. economics by br00tus · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Prior to the dot-com crash, I was mostly interested in fundamental equity analysis, or stock pricing. Since the crash I have become more interested in what used to be called political economy, or economics. In fundamental stock analysis, the intrusion of economics into basic equities analysis is mostly through the p/e ratio or price/earnings ratio. The common wisdom is that riskier stocks had a higher p/e ratio than safer stocks like utilities, but also had more potential for earnings growth. Of course, by March 11th, 2005, many companies were not only within the risk range of high p/e ratios, but had no earnings at all. I was expecting a crash, so I broke even on the stock market, selling half of my stocks when my stocks went down to double what they had been when I bought them, pulling out my original investment. Of course, the other half went to zero, or near it anyway. What I did not predict is how long IT would enter a doldrums, which made me more interested in economics.

    It is often said that people who risk money by buying a stock deserve the dividends they get by the risk they taking buying the stock. This is kind of tautological within the economic system however. The economic system consists of corporations producing commodities (PCs, bread, a colocation rack) and exchanging them for other commodities - a few decades ago money backed by gold, nowadays money which is theoretically worth something because one can pay taxes with it. Corporations often produce commodities which no one wants, which is the main risk of capital investment, it's a loss. Virtually everyone recognizes this as true, from former GE CEO Jack Welch to socialists like Paul Sweezy. Thus, the economic system commits the error of misplacing resources. This error produces capital risk, and this capital risk is the common explanation of why people deserve dividends from capital investment, instead of, say, the workers at the corporation who created that wealth.

    As far as the US economy, productivity was extremely poor throughout the 1930's, then from the mid 1940's to the mid 1960's were 20 years of enormous productivity. It began slowing down in the mid 1960's, and by the early 1970's everyone realized there was an enormous problem. Nixon went off the gold standard, imposed wage and price controls, and dismantled the Bretton Woods system. Productivity has been pretty poor since the mid-1960s, there have been arguments of whether it had a decent bump in the late 1990s or not. The late 1990s bump is obviously from the Internet, an R&D project the US government poured billions of dollars into from the 1960s until the mid 1990s, it was a state project (DARPAnet/NSFnet) handed over the corporations when it had been developed after 25 years of taxpayer funding. Anyhow, this long slowdown in economic productivity in the US has resulted in the average inflation-adjusted hourly wage in the US being below what it was 30 years before. Asia seems to be the only area with decent productivity growth in thw world, but that creates another problem of who is going to buy all of the commodities China is pumping out since the market is already saturated.

  16. Re:Nothing for you to see here. Please move along. by zapadoo · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Nasdaq did indeed crash, in every sense of the word. Just look at the declines in ALL the big names, and most of the small names, top to bottom. Many former $100, 200$ stocks traded to oblivion or a fraction of their former highs. Look at former high fliers like CMGI for an example, or RBAK perhaps even better!

    QCOM (post split) 100 to 11, 90% decline.
    RBAK Now 6.52. When you factor in all the splits it was something like 14,000.
    CMGI - was 163ish now 1.92.
    JNPR now 22.34. Sounds like an ok stock, until you realize its high was almost 245$.

    And the list goes on. And on.

    These examples are the definition of a bubble and a crash, a (hopefully) once in a generation event.

  17. Documentaries of the tech bubble by wormbin · · Score: 4, Informative

    If any of you want to remember the crazy days of the tech bubble check out the documentaries Startup.com and e-dreams.

    I still remember being somewhat tech savy, going to investors conferences and "not getting" how these companies that would never make significant money were commanding these valuations. It was like being in some sci-fi movie where everyone has been replaced by pod people.

  18. Wrong. by brunes69 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A mortgage is basically the best 'debt' you will ever have in your life. It is not like other debt because of two simple facts:

    - It is remarkably low interest (below prime rate right now with many banks)

    - The interest itself is tax-deductable, at least in the US.

    On top of this, the alternative - paying rent - is markedly worse. You are basically flushing money down the toilet, with a 0% return.

    The parent was indeed giving good advice. Your advice, however, is not prudent. Every year you delay getting a mortgage, is a full year of rent you could have been using to pay down one. Even if the interest rate on the mortgage was 15% or 20% (which it isn't), and even if there was no tax deduction (which there is), it would still be in your interest to get a mortgage.