Though
not in bubble territory, full valuations leave less margin for error and suggest more moderate gains moving forward.
The valuation of many tech companies may appear high, but forward P / E's in the 20's generally are
not in bubble territory.
Not exact matches
Many of the people I talked to for this story agreed that Bitcoin is likely
in bubble territory, but they also said that might
not matter.
Bitcoin appears to be
in bubble territory —
not only because of its price runup but also given the speculation, volatility, and new players
in the space.
It's very possibly
in bubble territory, but that might
not diminish its eventual impact on finance and technology.
So,
in a way, I hope
not too many people take my comment seriously and thus continue the good anti-growth work, and least until the distortion gets into
bubble territory — and we may already be there, but that's another story.
While we're
not yet
in bubble territory, I'd caution investors that US and European markets are historically expensive on both a price - to - earnings and price - to - sales basis.
Just because the real estate market
in the Toronto (well known as the epicenter of the universe) and to a lesser extent Vancouver is
in bubble territory does
not mean that there is a real estate
bubble in the rest of Canada.
While we don't believe we're
in bubble territory, valuations for many sectors are high — with P / E ratios driven more by price expansion (the «P») than by the more meaningful «E» of earnings.
Even if Bitcoin is
in bubble territory, the hope is that blockchain for business applications won't see a setback.
Criteria were teams that weren't already set at point guard, and were
in that playoff
bubble territory where they would be likely to give up a pick.
The Bearcats are
not in jeopardy of NIT
territory yet, but if they let this loss affect them for games to come, they could very well find themselves on the
bubble.
Other valuation metrics tell a similar story: Stocks are expensive, although it is
not clear that they are yet
in bubble territory.
Although the real estate industry insists we're
not in a
bubble, house prices continue to climb into nosebleed
territory: the price tag on Vancouver's average dwelling has risen to a staggering $ 762,100.
And I certainly don't think we're anywhere close to
bubble territory yet — leaving aside some obvious exceptions, investors aren't exhibiting any of the usual symptoms: Yes, I'm sure you know»em... a twisted market / valuation logic, a blatant disregard for risk / leverage, and / or a messianic over-confidence
in future growth & returns.
That's
not to say that Lockheed is necessarily trading
in bubble territory, since even at today's prices Lockheed has potential to generate 9.5 % to 10.5 % long - term total returns (2.5 % yield plus 7 % to 8 % annual earnings growth) if everything goes as planned.
Hussman thinks we're
in bubble territory, but Grantham, Faber, et al. think the US stock market is quite overvalued — but
not enough to sell.