Return on Reason
The S&P just closed at 7,398. The NASDAQ's forward PE is back at levels last seen at the dot-com peak and the 2021 frenzy. Warren Buffett is sitting on $373 billion in cash. Ray Dalio says we're 80% of the way into bubble territory. Meanwhile, the US is at war with Iran, the Strait of Hormuz has been disrupted for months, and the IEA is calling it the largest supply shock in oil market history. So why do equities — the asset class most exposed to all of it — keep printing new highs? The answer you'll hear everywhere is "liquidity." Cash on the sidelines. So much money in the system. But what does that actually mean? When people say money "flowed into" the market, where do they think it went? Does cash enter the market in aggregate, or does ownership just change hands at a higher price? And can liquidity alone justify permanently higher valuations — or is that just the story we tell ourselves at the top of every cycle? Max sits down with Ben to pressure-test the explanation everyone's relying on.
6 episodios
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