Google market cap has grown over 50% in the past six months. Nvidia was up nearly 70%. Tesla was in the same ballpark, I can't imagine why. Heck, Meta was up 35%, for no conceivable reason.
So the headline here should be probably less about a small 5% hiccup in that Bitcoin-like trajectory, and more about why the heck is so much money pouring into the sector - including Tesla and Facebook, which aren't on the forefront of anything right now.
You're all implicitly claiming that all assets return nominal value above inflation, which isn't even remotely true when we teach it to pimple-faced undergraduate students.
When you get down into the details, they're all just "things you can own" and the categories like "investment" and "wealth store" start to look very made up.
No, because while cash loses value, so do many assets. Simply putting money into assets instead of cash doesn't mean you make more money. You might, but you might also lose more money.
No, they haven't. You're thinking specifically about how the US market has been lucky enough for that to occur.
There is absolutely nothing intrinsic about that happening as a guarantee. Look at other countries' stock exchanges.
There have also been periods of time in US history where your equities would have lost catastrophic value as you were ready to retire and all of a sudden you wouldn't have been able to draw down on your retirement without a blend of income from somewhere else.
You're putting words in my mouth and responding to arguments I have never even made.
> There have also been periods of time in US history where your equities would have lost catastrophic value
This is true, but it also is true for cash. You rarely (never?) need all the value of your portfolio at once, so I don't understand your point. Also, most investors invest throughout their lives so even dramatic losses could actually just be a breakeven due to compounding[1]. My point stands that longer-term, an index vastly outperforms cash.
> you wouldn't have been able to draw down on your retirement without a blend of income from somewhere else
Guess what? This is exactly what happens in most cases (at least in my country) anyway as the national pension doesn't give nowhere near enough to live.
[1]: I've found a simulator that goes back a very long time back (https://dqydj.com/sp-500-periodic-reinvestment-calculator-di...). I've selected a period from January 1884 to December 1932. 1932 is one of the big dips, and 1884 would be the time someone would start working if he retired in 1932 (roughly 45 years earlier). For monthly investment you can put whatever you wish, but I've set the initial investment to zero. You can see that your scare tactic doesn't work as the investor still made a huge profit despite an apocalyptic market crash.
You can't attack other users like this here. Since we've asked you many times to stop breaking HN's guidelines and you've continued to do it, I've banned the account.
If you don't want to be banned, you're welcome to email hn@ycombinator.com and give us reason to believe that you'll follow the rules in the future. They're here: https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html.
Cash loses value every year. This has been true for every currency. We don't have late 20th century inflation but people who know basic personal finance do not want to hold too much cash right now.
Cash loses value at a relatively predictable rate. Equities and other assets gain and lose value at unpredictable rates. There are different rates and different predictabilities. When investors are happy, equities skyrocket to the moon; when investors are unhappy, they crash. US equities in the last 100ish years had an amazing upwards run that is atypical of anywhere else, anywhen else, or any other asset class; is that expected to continue or is it just survivor bias?
Stocks tend to go upwards much more than cash, in the long term, even accounting for crashes. But those crashes are still big. IIRC, if you buy right after a big crash, you get about twice as much stock for the same price, and skip ahead 10 years (25% of the complete duration of the game) compared to someone who bought right before. I haven't run the numbers but I'm assuming that means it's worth holding only cash for 10 years if you're sure there will definitely be a crash some time in that 10 years. That's a best case scenario but 10 years of retirement is not something to be gambled lightly.
> it's worth holding only cash for 10 years if you're sure there will definitely be a crash some time in that 10 years
Oh, because you know for sure that there will be a crash in the next 10 years? A prediction like that alone is worth billions, and I honestly doubt that you're different from the thousands of other who advocated for the same thing since the last 50 years.
In real life, an investor starts to keep assets that aren't as volatile but still aren't cash (e.g. bonds) as he approaches retirement. But even then, if they retire officially (i.e. at 65) then they probably have a national pension to draw from anyway.
> also, is Bitcoin a currency?
I don't care about cryptocurrencies at all, but it is the same classification as gold. People use it to speculate and reassure themselves thinking that "if it goes bad, it will preserve my wealth" and it doesn't have any value except when you trade it with someone for a usable currency.
Equities also lose and gain value. There's a reason to hold cash when it's preferrable to lose real, time and inflation-adjusted, value versus losing to speculative equities or other securities.
But go ahead, downvote me since you and the rest seem to think any asset is better than cash.
Which, of course, once again, isn't true.
You can buy bonds with real coupon rates worse than inflation; you can buy speculative equities whose YoY return nets negative.
But yeah, cash is bad, cash is bad. Buy assets no matter the value!
Go buy Pokémon cards! Right? I mean you guys are so smart, why hold cash? That's basic personal finance!
I bet you also like to tell people "don't time the market, it's time in the market," right?
There's no such thing as the "Lost Decades," that's a spooky Halloween story.
In fact, you're right, go invest in Keurig Dr. Pepper, or no no, how about Kraft Heinz. Those did so well compared to just holding cash.
What about real estate, huh? How about AirBnB? That better enough than cash for you? Not a fan of real estate?
How about Warner Bros Discovery? Yeah? That better than cash?
You could have lost money constantly on GameStop, but wait, there's more, you can go still lose money on it today! Why hold cash?
> I bet you also like to tell people "don't time the market, it's time in the market," right?
That's right.
> In fact, you're right, go invest in Keurig Dr. Pepper, or no no, how about Kraft Heinz. Those did so well compared to just holding cash.
You're either trolling me or don't know anything about modern personal finance. If you're willing to get out of your cave and open your worldview a little bit, I recommend reading the Bogleheads wiki.
Your argument is also flawed, as cash still lost some of its value. As it always did.
Also, comparing cash to investment in specific companies stock is an unfair comparison. USD vs S&P500 index is a fairer comparison.
It's fine if you yourself prefer to hold cash for whatever personal reasons you have, but please stop talking nonsense. A comparison of any currency in the world vs a roughly diversified index would invalidate all your points.
Not at all. Buying and selling on a fixed schedule regardless of the price of the asset is absolutely not timing.
Let me take the Investopedia definition[1]: "Market timing is the act of moving investment money in or out of a financial market—or switching funds between asset classes—based on predictive methods. Market timing is the opposite of a buy-and-hold strategy, where investors buy securities and hold them for a long period, regardless of market volatility." (emphasis mine)
> It's fine if you yourself prefer to hold cash for whatever personal reasons you have, but please stop talking nonsense. A comparison of any currency in the world vs a roughly diversified index would invalidate all your points.
Which is a sign the government has printed way too much money. What are they doing to fix it? Printing more...
There's actually an imbalance going on - the government has printed way too much money towards the stock market, and way too little towards the basics of a stable society, which is why there are symptoms of too much money and too little money simultaneously.
Simple. No one can predict where the next breakthrough will come from or what it will be, but everyone feels it will come.
This is also not like the other bubbles. It feels more like working on nukes or CRISPR but without the barrier to entry and constraints on rate of change. Market loves fast feedback loops. They can actually feel and touch this stuff unlike other game changers.
6 months seems like a carefully cherry-picked number there, it is basically middle of the the trough of the tariff-induced market collapse that started 7 months ago and had been recovered from 5 months ago. That explains about 20 percentage points.
The USD is down about 10% this year. Anything USD-denominated needed to go up by 10% just to stay even in real terms.
So you're looking at a 30%-ish baseline for that specific 6 month interval. That's basically where Meta (etc) are. Of the larger outliers:
Nvidia continued growing at >50% YoY, and their largest customers announced increased capex spending plans.
Google's valuation had been depressed by uncertainty from ongoing anti-trust cases. One of them got resolved (and the day the remedies were announced is exactly when Google's share price decoupled from Microsoft, Amazon and Meta).
Tesla, because they are the closest company to having a nation-sized fleet of autonomous taxis earning them some amount of revenue. Their autonomous driving system is roughly on-par with Waymo, but requires significantly less hardware, is already installed and running on millions of cars shipped since 2023 (HW gen4), and they have an established path to subsidizing the capex cost by selling these cars to consumers, then taking a percentage of self driving revenue (in addition to any centralized Waymo-like strategy they may concurrently run, like their pilot program in Austin). This is a wicked combination that has tons of stairstep potential lasting decades, as they work with regulators (well, whatever regulators are left) and expand the technology into other domains like semis.
In comparison: Waymo has awesome technology, but logistically, they open, like, a small subset of one new city every year. Tesla has the logistics; Waymo doesn't. And there's no third company in the west that's even close.
You should always assume that everything you read on Hacker News is the opinion of the individual typing it, unless otherwise properly cited. That's your responsibility.
I've done three 500 mile trips with it this year, and on one of these trips I challenged myself to never disengage, except when within just a few meters of the superchargers, home, or the destination. It did it. And the other two, I probably disengaged only a couple times on the other trips, mostly for stylistic reasons ("I wouldn't drive in the left lane here, that's a bit aggressive" kind of stuff). All in all I have ~6,000 FSD miles this year I'd estimate. Day-to-day, every once in a while if the lane markers are faded or something it might take the wrong lane across intersections, but its supremely good at making mistakes safely and recovering.
Its so good that its boring now. I show it to people and they're amazed for the first ten minutes, then they forget about it. "Wait, you weren't driving? That was the car?" It just works. I've literally fallen asleep, accidentally, for a very short time (it has attention monitoring, but its not good). There's an initial moment of panic when I woke up & realized that happened, but then I was like... why? That panic felt like a trauma relic my mind has held on to from driving other cars. In this car, there was zero risk. It was no different than the 500 mile zero-interaction journey I had done the month before. It doesn't need me in the drivers seat.
The only thing it struggles with is when there's debris on the road, or potholes. It'll usually just hit it. But even this is improving; yesterday I noticed a squirrel running across the road, and the car very subtly applied the brakes, before the squirrel cleared the other side, and the car continued at its normal speed. It was exactly what I would have done; maybe the squirrel doubles-back, so you need to prep your speed to be in a place where you can brake. It might have, if the squirrel had decided to do this. I have no doubt they will iron these problems out, because a year ago the list of "situations it struggles with" would have been this entire post.
But if you're not interacting with this technology every day, you have no idea. The future is here, its just not evenly distributed. But, these things have a way of happening slowly, then all at once.
Tesla has a fundamental leadership problem. Few CEOs spend so much time enthusiastically enraging and attacking their potential customer base. (Not to mention politicians, unions, etc.) I’ll be in the market for an electric vehicle soon but there is no fucking way I’m spending money on anything Musk-related ever again, and I’m hardly an abberation. It will be a massive albatross around the company’s neck until Musk is no longer associated with them.
On the other hand, nobody hates Waymo. In fact, people largely love Waymo. When it comes to consumer technology, this is a massive differentiator.
Fire sale from expiring EV credits. Sales massively down in Europe and China. It’s almost inevitable that BYD and ilk will eventually eat Tesla’s lunch: the cars are cheaper, better, sexier, and have comparatively little political baggage.
Anecdotally, in my circles, Tesla isn’t even part of the conversation anymore when it comes to cars. No sign of any reversal of sentiment.
(With that said, I have no desire to bet against a meme stock.)
Meta's last earnings absolutely ripped, their stock jumped 11%, and somehow the stock's P/E ratio went down. I honestly think the market sleeps on Meta. I guess they really hate them investing so much in wearables/AI/metaverse stuff, but they just make so much god damn money I truly think they don't know what to do with it.
I mean what was I supposed to glean from the article? It's all a bubble? I'm a bubble; I'll be dead in the end and then I won't be able to affect the world. Having an idea of the timescale of a bubble helps folks understand the world around them.
Google was severely undervalued for quite a while. It's current pe is only less than 25.
While other mag7 might have inflated valuation, google was undervalued for a long time. There are quite a lot people bet Google would bounce back and the risk was low
As another comment pointed out, P/E 25 is still absolutely insane. Realistic ordinary numbers are more like... 5 - since that means with 100% of the company's earnings going to dividends, it would take you 5 years to break even. 100% of the company's earnings don't go to dividends, though, so probably 10 years or more. Which is about the longest that a company that pays the highest dividends it can could be expected to last.
A P/E of 25 only makes sense if we expect Google to pentuple its earnings. Already one of the biggest companies on the planet, become five times as big? It seems preposterous.
It’s relevant to point out a regular nontech slowgrowing company like CocaCola has a PE of 20+, therefore the claim that a normal one is 5 is mistaken.
20-year average P/E for US stock market as a whole is ~20 (current s&p500 forward estimate is 24). Historically they were a bit lower (eyeballing it at 15), and in the aftermath of the Great Depression they it was aroun 10.
You want to claim the US stock market for the past 100 years is insane, go ahead, but that's a different argument than saying Google or NVIDIA, only slightly above the average for S&P500, are overpriced compared to the rest of the market.
And if the entire market is overpriced, where you going to invest instead? Crypto? Gold? Both shot up much more. Real estate? Bonds? Europe? China? Better have a good thesis on that.
>why the heck is so much money pouring into the sector - including Tesla and Facebook
The names you pulled out have Size factor in common, and with the modern market cap weighted index/futures dominated market, flows into Size factor have a close correlation with overall liquidity flows. That's a broad phrase, but if you're talking about the narrative over the past 6 months (most human readable market narratives are bunk, but some are sound) you mainly watched the system deleverage and then releverage, which constitutes a major flow of liquidity. With 7% daily real moves, extreme implied volatility, and more concrete geopolitical uncertainty, portfolio risk metrics from any angle light up and risk has to be taken down. Not just hedge funds and traders (although they exert significant influence), but the more broad equity space as well, such as say pension funds who are in portfolios that target a yearly volatility band (vol targeting), or trend followers (500 billion and highly levered), and of course regular people who for either emotional or other reasons can't take the heat.
Since the tariff shock, realized and implied volatility have come down, which mechanically drives a bid from the vol-targeting world, and gives more buying power to any entity who has a volatility budget (and to some degree everyone does), and that forms trends which bring traders and trend followers back in, and of course allows the construction of new narratives which most humans always like to have before committing capital.
The points of extremely high leverage and extremely sharp deleveraging (panic selling) are often excessive in nature. It's a cycle that repeats, in an ongoing auction and price discovery process that never ends. Better to just look at longer term averages if you want to strip those aspects out. But that does beg the question of why this cycle continues to persist, and the answer is quite simply that dynamically targeting exposure can be profitable even with the obvious drawbacks. Selling volatility makes money. Following trends also makes money, and in trend following most of the profit comes from the extreme moves that you would think are the most dangerous (ex: gold recently, or equities themselves - mechanical trend followers have been increasingly net long equities until exposure started coming down within the past few weeks).
The recent selloff had about 150 billion in forced selling from realized and implied volatility exposed entities: "Taking a look at Nomura's estimated "Index Rebalancing Projection” proxy which is an aggregation of SPX Options Dealer positioning / Greeks hedging, Leveraged ETF rebalancing and Vol Control deallocation flows: -$88.9B for Spot ~-2% move (which nearly doubles to -$151.0B in a -3% slide... which is pretty much where the Nasdaq is right now)." (from Friday)
Ex: The portfolio I run has a volatility selling component, and it's been cranking on that for months now with fine results. Typically as this goes on, human fallacies creep in. Look at incentives, which are usually defined in yearly terms, which leads to traders and portfolio managers feeling like they have "house money" to gives back when they have high profits somewhere. Then you also have the greed and fear of missing out that builds up as well. AI being "hot" and the gold narrative are headline stories now.
Also remember that modern markets are surprisingly illiquid, which effects both on the downside and the upside. Be careful about assigning a few shares trading at a price to the "price" of the entire bulk of shares. This especially applies to the Teslas of the world that you named, and many of the AI names. People like to extrapolate when they maybe shouldn't be.
You have some other topics you're bringing up. Some of it can see some pushback: I remember thinking Google was dirt cheap 4 months ago. The popular narrative was that AI was going to destroy Google Search, etc, but I thought it was fairly likely AI search blurbs would not be a catastrophe, and then of course Gemini/Google's in house AI prowess was almost entirely ignored despite fairly excellent execution, and more importantly Google Cloud growth was downplayed at the same time it was hyped up at every other cloud company (that's a spread that seemed unsustainable), and then finally YouTube growth and recent expectation beating aspects of the business were downplayed as well. (This was my biggest equity position if you couldn't tell, although it no longer is since the business seems more in line with peers now).
Then you have some obvious statements that the market is making about currency debasement. Equity markets generally perform very strongly in nominal terms during inflationary periods, and many debasement trades like Gold are through the roof. Perhaps the market is just expecting further concentration of wealth at the top and more asset inflation, rather than goods inflation. Another angle of this is that bonds are not looking attractive to people, and there seems to be some desperation for alternatives (I'd say that explains some of the gold run, especially if you personify foreign central banks this way as well, which is arguably true).
So the headline here should be probably less about a small 5% hiccup in that Bitcoin-like trajectory, and more about why the heck is so much money pouring into the sector - including Tesla and Facebook, which aren't on the forefront of anything right now.