Originally posted by: glugglug
Originally posted by: zillafurby
also its never 100% clear that things are very overvalued, you just get the perception
Not only was this crystal clear during the previous dot-com bubble peak, it is still 100% clear right now (the bubble hasn't burst yet, it just had some air let out...). What is not so clear is when the perception of this fact that they are extremely overvalued will reach the critical mass it needs to begin the freefall.
The tricky part of playing the market is
predicting perception, as this has far more effect on prices than reality. Ironically, the general public's stupidity makes the market harder to predict because it has kind of a randomizing effect on perception. (not really random, but can't think of a better term to describe it right now).
i agree predicting perception is th key to trading price acion. its hard. the easy way, and possibly the only long term successful one is to arbitrage the traders and anayasts when you know they are wrong and the numbers will give them a surprise. as you mentioned glugglug. personally i am a better and more comfortable fundamentas analyst so i stick to position trades more. i am looking at range trades on the indices though as well, since its a long term bull market, but i need more observational experience first.
markets are composed of price searchers with different skill, power, thoughts, attitudes, and time horizons.
i the late 90's two things happened value stocks got wiped out by a withdrawal of capital, and several hegde funds closed because of it, including the biggest of them, tiger management, they were long on dcf type value stocks.
second cash was pushed towards the gogo large caps, which bought firms with paper and loaded up with debt, and tmt got a bubble.
glug when you have high growth gdp, new tech, like the internet, new industries, then out of the legitimate players, its impossible to estimate the value of the stock with any accuracy, and in the late 90's you couldnt, until the growth bagan to stabilise that was 99 and 00.
in terms of the advertising and other dot coms, most didnt have legit business models, and rapidly their revenue stream looked uneconomic for their advertisers, so yes they were definitely overvalued, but the problem is when the overvaluation gets crystallised for your short.
interms of the legit businesses using logic you can suss out an overvaluation when its extreme, then you see the numbers flow through and the market perceive it and ultimately react to it. with say networkers, only when broadband didnt get the take up needed, did it look like everything was over for the m&t crowd, until then when you had facts it was largely a perception. of course when you see in fact and the market reacts, you look for stable and predictable companies with too much debt, that are going to zero, or if you like a bit of price tradibg then something smaller for a quick fall to zero or near.
but you need to distinguish between fact and peception, perception is when you dont have concrete info to go on, and in the late 90's you didnt, bylate 99 and early 2000 it was coming through thick and fast, for the legit stocks.
the candy floss stocks were pure momentum plays all along anyway.
Originally posted by: glugglug
Another prediction: AMD is about to go through the roof. The signficance of Dell beginning to sell AMD chips can not be overstated.
well it signified the commoditisation of the industry, and a stabilisation of the technology and the franchise value of the designs. of course intel still has a brand and will cut prices aggressively, to hurt amd on its r&d iinvestment, i would cut prices and costs to starve amd of cash. amd is still a momentum play in terms of the pc business, whether it has advantages of real long term value in 64-bit servers, is beyond me im afraid.