

Stocks Have Surpassed Dot-Com Bubble Highs… And That’s BULLISH
The U.S. stock market is now valued at nearly twice the size of the entire American economy — even more stretched than it was at the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000. Back then, valuations were inflated by a frenzy of unproven tech companies and sky-high expectations that eventually collapsed. Today looks very different. The biggest U.S. companies are profitable, globally dominant, and pulling in capital from investors around the world. In this episode, we break down why this historic valuation gap isn’t necessarily bearish, what’s driving it, and why expensive stocks can still keep running higher.
0:00 Intro
0:48 The stock market is more overhauled than it was at the height of the dot com bubble
3:26 Chipotle, CABA, and SweetGreen are all struggling
5:15 Meet 15-year-old wonderkid investor Amir Fischer
From the Desk of Anthony Pompliano on Youtube: https://youtu.be/BWg7JDopDfU
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