Robeco, The Investments Engineers
blue circle

17-09-2024 · Visión

Bursting or buzzing bubbles?

The magnificent outperformance and stratospheric valuations of a few Big Tech stocks have many investors worried about an investment bubble. Laurens Swinkels and Peter van der Welle analyze a century’s worth of market cycles and find bubbles behave differently, and they are not always bad.

    Autores/Autoras

  • Peter van der Welle - Strategist Sustainable Multi Asset Solutions

    Peter van der Welle

    Strategist Sustainable Multi Asset Solutions

  • Laurens Swinkels - Head of Quant Strategy

    Laurens Swinkels

    Head of Quant Strategy

In financial markets, bursting bubbles are frequently characterized by irrational exuberance, where investors drastically overestimate future earnings growth or simply buy assets due to a fear of missing out. Classic bubbles see a spectacular rise in valuations and asset prices only to ‘burst’ as fundamentals catch up to the speculative hype and prices plummet.

In contrast to conventional thinking, Swinkels and van der Welle argue that some bubbles can be entirely rational, especially when investors rightly anticipate the extraordinary growth of a paradigm-shifting technology in the real economy.1 They call these ‘buzzing bubbles’ because their strong price increases and high valuations are largely justified.

Buzzing bubbles are characterized by strong price increases and high valuations that are largely justified

Since AI took center stage in early 2023, the Magnificent Seven2 have outperformed the S&P 500 by around 80%. Rocketing prices and valuations are understandably stoking concerns of a tech equity bubble. Are concerns warranted and if so, should investors be bracing for a spectacular burst or a beneficial buzz?

Figure 1: Performance of the Magnificent Seven versus the rest of the US market

Figure 1: Performance of the Magnificent Seven versus the rest of the US market

Source: Robeco, LSEG Datastream, S&P 500.
Rebased price index of Magnificent Seven and the S&P 500 index excluding the Magnificent Seven.

Typical bubble phases

Bubbles often begin with an overly optimistic sentiment that a new era has begun and that the old rules no longer apply. Recall the low interest rate environment of the Great Financial Crisis of 2008 or the dot-com boom of the nineties. Whatever the initial cause, they tend to follow the same pattern: valuations and stock prices rise as early entrants generate large profits. Higher valuations lure more competitors. Investor sentiment and capital flows surge, fueling a self-perpetuating loop. Even informed investors can get caught in the mayhem, abandoning better judgement to follow popular wisdom in the hopes that a bubble has further to run.

This crazed phase is followed by a ‘Minsky moment’.3 Animal spirits are replaced with the collective realization that the rally is overextended and that stocks are massively overvalued. Panic begins sending fearful investors stampeding toward the exit. The market crashes and asset prices correct. Cyclical stagnation ensues and investors are left despondent and calling for more regulation.

By now, most investors agree that bubbles are bad. But the authors challenge that notion showing not every bubble is created equal. Although crashes are preceded by price run-ups and expensive valuations, it would be a mistake to take this evidence and conclude that most price run-ups lead to crashes.

It would be a mistake to take this evidence and conclude that most price run-ups lead to crashes

Acceda a las perspectivas más recientes

Suscríbase a nuestro newsletter para recibir información actualizada sobre inversiones y análisis de expertos.

No se lo pierda

Some bubbles burst others buzz

Building on previous academic research and nearly a century’s worth of US stock data spanning 49 industries, the authors identified 51 industry bubbles in US equity markets from (see Figure 2, blue line).4

Studying their aftermaths, only half of these ended in a burst – defined as a drawdown in returns of more than 40% in the two years following an industry’s stock-price run (Figure 2, magenta line). Examples include utilities (1929), gold (1980), software (1999), and steel (2007). Buzzing bubbles on the other hand, experienced a similar two-year run up in prices but saw no subsequent price drawdown in the two-years following. In fact, returns continued to rise (Figure 2, green line).

Initially, there is little to distinguish between bursting and buzzing bubbles as they expand. However, things get interesting at month nine, where bubble behavior diverges. Bursting bubbles begin to lose a bit of steam, ultimately ending with negative return of about 30% in the two-years following. Returns of buzzing bubbles continue upwards gaining an additional 50% positive return.

Figure 2: Bubbles exhibit different behavior

Figure 2: Bubbles exhibit different behavior

Source: Robeco, Kenneth French Data Library, Greenwood, Shleifer, and You (2019).

The graphic displays industry price run-ups and subsequent performance from US industries from 1926-2024. The blue line indicates the average rebased price index of 51 detected industry-wide bubbles. Of these 23 saw a maximum drawdown of at least 40% (magenta) in the two years that followed, and 28 that did not experience such drawdown (purple).

Other bubbling indicators

While interesting and to some extent comforting to know not all bubbles end badly, investors still need more surrounding indicators to help define what kind we may be approaching. The run-up data from Figure 2 sheds a bit more light, revealing that industry price bubbles that burst tend to have stronger price run-ups compared to buzzing varieties (200% versus 160%).

Moreover, investor optimism is also much higher with bursts than buzzes (77% vs 53% of the median value) coinciding with high market-wide valuations.5 And while valuations are expensive at the start of any bubble compared to the general market average (22.5 vs 18.8), they are even higher for bursts compared to buzzes (23.5 vs 21.6).6

In the absence of bubbles, the probability of a 40% drawdown for an industry within a two-year period is about 13%, but that probability more than triples (45%) when a bubble starts.

So while bubbles can’t be used to precisely predict future returns, they do predict higher equity risks!

Should investors brace for a burst or expect a buzz?

So, are we in a rational or irrational bubble? Ultimately, while there are definitely signs that we are currently in a bubble with an increased risk of a sell-off in the medium term, it is by no means a certainty that we are in a bursting bubble when it comes to technology stocks.

The average two-year run-up return of bursting bubbles is close to 200%, far higher than we have observed today (around 80%). And while the US tech sector is expensive, it’s not exceptionally so based on historical figures. Likewise, overall market sentiment is high (60%), but once again not exceptionally so. Sentiment was far larger during bust periods (77%). News flows specific to technology stocks are substantially above the market average, but not more than usual.

So what should investors do given the circumstances?

One way to keep broad equity market exposure but reduce the probability and severity of a drawdown is to allocate to low-risk assets, preferably those with good momentum, high quality, and attractive valuations. This may come at the cost of missing out on a bubble that keeps on buzzing but will likely reduce the pain in case of a correction.

This article is an excerpt of a special topic in our five-year outlook.

Ver todos los artículos de esta serie


Footnotes

1The history of financial bubbles is described in more detail in: O’Hara (2008), Goetzmann (2016), Engsted (2016), and Quinn and Turner (2023).
2Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, and Tesla
3Named for American economist Hyman Minsky, whose research characterized stages of credit cycles and how they lead to financial crises.
4Following the Greenwood, Shleifer, and You (2019) definition of bubbles: a price that has gone up by 100% and has had an outperformance relative to the broader stock market index of 100%, both over the past two years.
5Source for the NYT sentiment index: https://www.hakholm.com/nyt-sentiment-index
6Valuations are calculated using cyclically adjusted price/earnings (CAPE) ratios.

Webinar: 5-Year Expected Returns 2025-2029

Our five-year outlook on market opportunities and risks.


Registrarse

Mantengamos la conversación

Manténgase al día de los constantes cambios en inversión sostenible y factorial, tendencias y crédito.

No se lo pierda
Robeco

El objetivo de Robeco es proporcionar a sus clientes unos rendimientos y soluciones de inversión superiores para que consigan sus objetivos financieros y de sostenibilidad.

Información importante
Los Fondos Robeco Capital Growth no han sido inscritos conforme a la Ley de sociedades de inversión de Estados Unidos (United States Investment Company Act) de 1940, en su versión en vigor, ni conforme a la Ley de valores de Estados Unidos (United States Securities Act) de 1933, en su versión en vigor. Ninguna de las acciones puede ser ofrecida o vendida, directa o indirectamente, en los Estados Unidos ni a ninguna Persona estadounidense en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores de 1933, en su versión en vigor (en lo sucesivo, la “Ley de Valores”)). Asimismo, Robeco Institutional Asset Management B.V. (Robeco) no presta servicios de asesoramiento de inversión, ni da a entender que puede ofrecer este tipo de servicios, en los Estados Unidos ni a ninguna Persona estadounidense (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores). Este sitio Web está únicamente destinado a su uso por Personas no estadounidenses fuera de Estados Unidos (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) que sean inversores profesionales o fiduciarios profesionales que representen a dichos inversores que no sean Personas estadounidenses. Al hacer clic en el botón “Acepto” que se encuentra en el aviso sobre descargo de responsabilidad de nuestro sitio Web y acceder a la información que se encuentra en dicho sitio, incluidos sus subdominios, usted confirma y acepta lo siguiente: (i) que ha leído, comprendido y aceptado el presente aviso legal, (ii) que se ha informado de las restricciones legales aplicables y que, al acceder a la información contenida en este sitio Web, manifiesta que no infringe, ni provocará que Robeco o alguna de sus entidades o emisores vinculados infrinjan, ninguna ley aplicable, por lo que usted está legalmente autorizado a acceder a dicha información, en su propio nombre y en representación de sus clientes de asesoramiento de inversión, en su caso, (iii) que usted comprende y acepta que determinada información contenida en el presente documento se refiere a valores que no han sido inscritos en virtud de la Ley de Valores, y que solo pueden venderse u ofrecerse fuera de Estados Unidos y únicamente por cuenta o en beneficio de Personas no estadounidenses (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores), (iv) que usted es, o actúa como asesor de inversión discrecional en representación de, una Persona no estadounidense (en el sentido de la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) situada fuera de los Estados Unidos y (v) que usted es, o actúa como asesor de inversión discrecional en representación de, un inversión profesional no minorista.


El acceso a este sitio Web ha sido limitado, de manera que no constituya intento de venta dirigida (según se define este concepto en la Regulation S promulgada en virtud de la Ley de Valores) en Estados Unidos, y que no pueda entenderse que a través del mismo Robeco dé a entender al público estadounidense en general que ofrece servicios de asesoramiento de inversión. Nada de lo aquí señalado constituye una oferta de venta de valores o la promoción de una oferta de compra de valores en ninguna jurisdicción. Nos reservamos el derecho a denegar acceso a cualquier visitante, incluidos, a título únicamente ilustrativo, aquellos visitantes con direcciones IP ubicadas en Estados Unidos. Este sitio Web ha sido cuidadosamente elaborado por Robeco. La información de esta publicación proviene de fuentes que son consideradas fiables. Robeco no es responsable de la exactitud o de la exhaustividad de los hechos, opiniones, expectativas y resultados referidos en la misma. Aunque en la elaboración de este sitio Web se ha extremado la precaución, no aceptamos responsabilidad alguna por los daños de ningún tipo que se deriven de una información incorrecta o incompleta. El presente sitio Web podrá sufrir cambios sin previo aviso. El valor de las inversiones puede fluctuar. Rendimientos anteriores no son garantía de resultados futuros. Si la divisa en que se expresa el rendimiento pasado difiere de la divisa del país en que usted reside, tenga en cuenta que el rendimiento mostrado podría aumentar o disminuir al convertirlo a su divisa local debido a las fluctuaciones de los tipos de cambio. Para inversores profesionales únicamente. Prohibida su comunicación al público en general.