Investors bid the price of hot stocks so high because of growth
expectations years into the future or a mystique around the founder and invariably get caught in the crash when the company fails to meet expectations.
Not exact matches
Because our model focuses on quantifying the market's
expectations for the
future financial performance of a company as embedded in the stock price, we need a more dynamic DCF model than the traditional models that force the valuation of every stock
into a 5 or 10 -
year forecast horizon.
A decomposition of 10 -
year US Treasury yields
into a
future rate
expectations component and a term premium suggests that declining term premia drove long - term rates lower both now and during the mid-2000s «conundrum» episode.