"Just because asset prices go up doesn't mean it's a bubble," BMO's Brian Belski told Business Insider.
The dot-com bubble was a period during which rampant speculation and bullish investment led to the overvaluation (and subsequent crash) of the young internet technology industry on Wall Street.
In this Sunday edition of BI Today, we're talking about the current market's similarities to the dot-com bubble burst almost ...
The arrival of the internet in the mid-1990s set off an investment boom as techies and entrepreneurs tried to work out what the “World Wide Web” could do — and how to make it turn a profit. Investors, ...
While it’s tempting to compare the current excitement around AI to the dot-com bubble of 2000, it would be wrong to draw too many parallels, says Brad Holland As one market reporter quipped in ...
Sandwiched between those last two high-water marks was Barron’s historic cover story of March 20, 2000, on the frightening rate at which dot-com wunderkinders were burning cash thrust at them by ...
As my colleague Matthew Fox reports, this month marks the 25th anniversary of the peak of the dot-com bubble. Back then, a burgeoning technology called the World Wide Web lit a fire under the markets.