While the year's end saw an uptick in concern about
a new tech bubble, the truth is that there's a much different, scarier bubble we need to worry about: the carbon bubble.
Has the sharp run - up in e-commerce stocks created
a new tech bubble?
There has been quite a lot of talk about
a new tech bubble for the past few years.
Not exact matches
But when the
tech -
bubble burst in 2000 the company decided to pull out of its
new markets to concentrate on conquering the home markets.
The city is at the point where a not - insignificant portion of residents are rooting for the so - called
tech bubble to implode at least a little, the
New York Times reported earlier this month.
When you have experience outside of the
tech bubble, you take on a
new perspective and can come at a problem (and solve it) differently.
The price tag attached to the 1,700 - square - foot lot shows the extent of the housing
bubble in San Francisco, where
tech workers create demand faster than the city can build
new housing.
As the rest of the country worries about the slow pace of economic recovery, the
tech world frets about whether there's a
new start - up
bubble.
By 2000, after a telecom bust and the bursting of the
tech bubble in
New York, Joe's company was taking on capital on onerous terms to sustain the company's growth.
Bubbles from the past include the Dutch tulip bulb crash of 1637 and the dot.com
tech stock meltdown in 2000 when millions of dollars was invested in
new internet companies, many of which later collapsed.
Through baby boom and baby bust, from
tech bubble to housing
bubble, from the depths of the Great Recession to recovery,
New Strategist has been tracking trends for more than 25 years.
The irony is that even as they bring
new cash into the
tech world, super angels might actually be helping to deflate an incipient startup
bubble.
Venture capitalists face a
tech bubble on the horizon, along with an influx of
new non-traditional investors via Wall Street and crowdfunding platforms.
Many finance and
tech experts have recently called Bitcoin a «
bubble» and «tulip mania 2.0» but Bitcoin has managed to thrive despite these heavy accusations, and this week it hit a
new all - time high price.
While the first
tech boom, and subsequent bust, more than a decade ago is a concern for the massive
bubble of
new tech companies today, Yasukochi says there's evidence that this cycle will be different, that the boom may be slow to diminish.