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speculative bubble

См. также в других словарях:

  • Speculative Bubble — A spike in asset values within a particular industry, commodity, or asset class. A speculative bubble is usually caused by exaggerated expectations of future growth, price appreciation, or other events that could cause an increase in asset values …   Investment dictionary

  • speculative bubble —   bolla speculativa   Rapida ascesa delle quotazioni azionarie verso valori insostenibili per i fondamentali delle società e dell economia, ad es. i corsi del Nasdaq nel periodo 1998 2000 …   Glossario di economia e finanza

  • bubble — bub‧ble [ˈbʌbl] noun [countable] 1. FINANCE when a lot of people buy shares in a company that is financially weak, with the result that the price of the shares becomes much higher than their real value: • A speculative bubble may have been… …   Financial and business terms

  • bubble — [[t]bʌ̱b(ə)l[/t]] bubbles, bubbling, bubbled 1) N COUNT Bubbles are small balls of air or gas in a liquid. Ink particles attach themselves to air bubbles and rise to the surface. ...a bubble of gas trapped under the surface. 2) N COUNT A bubble… …   English dictionary

  • Bubble Company — A company whose valuation greatly exceeds that suggested by its fundamentals. The first well documented bubble company was the South Sea Company, which caused the South Sea Bubble in 1720. A bubble company arises when speculators continuously buy …   Investment dictionary

  • speculative — securities that involve a high level of risk. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * speculative spec‧u‧la‧tive [ˈspekjlətɪv ǁ leɪ ] adjective 1. FINANCE bought or done in the hope of making a profit: • Their £461 million bid for the electronics… …   Financial and business terms

  • Economic bubble — An economic bubble (sometimes referred to as a speculative bubble, a market bubble, a price bubble, a financial bubble, a speculative mania or a balloon) is trade in high volumes at prices that are considerably at variance with intrinsic values… …   Wikipedia

  • Dot-com bubble — The dot com bubble (also referred to as the Internet bubble and the Information Technology Bubble[1]) was a speculative bubble covering roughly 1995–2000 (with a climax on March 10, 2000, with the NASDAQ peaking at 5132.52 in intraday trading… …   Wikipedia

  • Second dot-com bubble — There has been speculation of a second dot com bubble to succeed the first that occurred roughly between 1995 and 2001. Some refer to it as Bubble 2.0,cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/6036337.stm |title=Has the dotcom boom… …   Wikipedia

  • Spanish property bubble — The residential real estate bubble in Spain saw Real Estate prices rise 247% from 1997 to 2005 [ [http://www.spainrei.com/MiV Spain Property Prices 95 07 yearly.htm According to the Spanish Ministry of Housing ] ] . € 651,168,000,000 is the… …   Wikipedia

  • Chaotic bubble — Many dynamical processes that generate bubbles are nonlinear, many exhibiting patterns consistent with mathematically chaotic dynamics (chaos theory). In such cases, chaotic bubbles can be said to occur. In most systems they arise out of a… …   Wikipedia

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