A new breed of brave investors is taking on the tech titans, betting big on artificial intelligence and other popular stocks despite dire warnings of an impending crash.
Jacob Foot, 23, had a hunch about AI's potential in his first job at a chipmaker. He put his savings into US shares with companies like Nvidia, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, Alphabet (Google), and Meta, which he tracked through the Magnificent Seven (M7) list. Five years later, Foot expects to buy a bigger house than initially planned, thanks to his steady stock market bets.
Young investors like Foot are gaining confidence in their ability to navigate turbulent markets. When shares slip, they hold tight, seeing dips as buying opportunities. "I wanted a good balance between 'set and forget' stocks like the M7 and a few smaller companies with good upside potential," he says of his investment strategy.
Companies that bet on rising stock prices are nervous about the new wave of amateur investors, who fuel price increases through sheer demand. According to Xavier Gabaix and Ralph Koijen's inelastic markets hypothesis, share prices surge as money pours into popular assets. Low-cost trading apps, YouTube videos, and social media platforms have fueled this trend.
Industry experts warn that young traders might lose confidence if warnings of a financial crash mount. As the saying goes: "As long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance." Retail investors continue to ride out market volatility, but for how much longer?
Amateur investors' fearlessness has led to record-breaking gains in popular stocks like Nvidia and Microsoft. The AI bubble theory suggests that valuations are rising due to money pouring into these companies rather than their fundamental value. As the phenomenon grows, concerns about a potential correction continue to grow.
Sam Woods, former head of the Bank of England's Prudential Regulatory Authority, expressed caution but noted that financial services firms remain "reasonably well-equipped" for the current challenges.
Olivier Blanchard, former IMF chief economist and MIT professor, fears that young investors are creating an environment ripe for financial bubbles to form. His concern is that investors focus on past returns rather than fundamentals, ignoring market warnings.
The future of this trend remains uncertain, with experts weighing in on its sustainability. For now, it seems that these brave investors will keep dancing β as long as the music plays.
Jacob Foot, 23, had a hunch about AI's potential in his first job at a chipmaker. He put his savings into US shares with companies like Nvidia, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, Alphabet (Google), and Meta, which he tracked through the Magnificent Seven (M7) list. Five years later, Foot expects to buy a bigger house than initially planned, thanks to his steady stock market bets.
Young investors like Foot are gaining confidence in their ability to navigate turbulent markets. When shares slip, they hold tight, seeing dips as buying opportunities. "I wanted a good balance between 'set and forget' stocks like the M7 and a few smaller companies with good upside potential," he says of his investment strategy.
Companies that bet on rising stock prices are nervous about the new wave of amateur investors, who fuel price increases through sheer demand. According to Xavier Gabaix and Ralph Koijen's inelastic markets hypothesis, share prices surge as money pours into popular assets. Low-cost trading apps, YouTube videos, and social media platforms have fueled this trend.
Industry experts warn that young traders might lose confidence if warnings of a financial crash mount. As the saying goes: "As long as the music is playing, you've got to get up and dance." Retail investors continue to ride out market volatility, but for how much longer?
Amateur investors' fearlessness has led to record-breaking gains in popular stocks like Nvidia and Microsoft. The AI bubble theory suggests that valuations are rising due to money pouring into these companies rather than their fundamental value. As the phenomenon grows, concerns about a potential correction continue to grow.
Sam Woods, former head of the Bank of England's Prudential Regulatory Authority, expressed caution but noted that financial services firms remain "reasonably well-equipped" for the current challenges.
Olivier Blanchard, former IMF chief economist and MIT professor, fears that young investors are creating an environment ripe for financial bubbles to form. His concern is that investors focus on past returns rather than fundamentals, ignoring market warnings.
The future of this trend remains uncertain, with experts weighing in on its sustainability. For now, it seems that these brave investors will keep dancing β as long as the music plays.