“I think we’re in a bubble like 2000,” veteran hedge fund manager Mark Yusko told CNN Business. “That doesn’t mean the market will crash tomorrow.”
“Stock markets are generally in bubble territory. Look at the parabolic movements of some companies like Tesla,” he said.
“That’s just financial engineering,” he said.
Impossible to time
Yusko’s bubble warning echoes the warning of other well-known market players in recent weeks.
Of course, no one can take the time when a bubble will burst. And overheated markets can get much hotter before they eventually cool.
“The challenge with extreme valuations is that they can last longer than you think,” said Yusko.
Morgan Stanley: Get on board or get out of the way
While Yusko and Grantham sound the alarm, some large Wall Street companies remain very optimistic about the economy and the stock market. They point to the persistence of the lowest interest rates that have forced investors to bet on stocks.
Goldman Sachs upgraded its forecasts for the second quarter of 2021 and 2022 GDP on Monday amid a sense that the Democrats will be passing on a significantly larger aid package than previously expected.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs expects the S&P 500 to rise to 4,300 by the end of the year, about 11% more than its current level.
Michael Wilson, stock strategist at Morgan Stanley, thinks the stock market scare caused by Reddit is already firmly in the rearview mirror.
“It looks like greed has reignited fear again and the bull market is poised to resume in earnest,” Wilson wrote in a note to customers on Sunday.
After suffering its worst week since October, the S&P 500 quickly regained its losses last week peaking at 4.7%.
“The Fed’s prevailing view of better economic growth, increased fiscal stimulus and continued monetary pressure has got everyone all-in,” Wilson wrote. “When such periods do occur, it has rarely been easy or sensible to get in the way. Instead, these trends usually have to run until they derail or simply run out.”
SPAC mania
Late last month, Yusko Morgan Creek launched Exos SPAC Originated ETF, a fund focusing on pre- and post-merger SPACs of equal weight.
But some argue that SPACs are more evidence of bubbly behavior on Wall Street.
SPACs are “an invitation to give me your money and I’ll let you know one day what I’m going to do with them,” Grantham recently told CNBC.
In the first three weeks of 2021 alone, SPACs raised $ 16 billion, more than the $ 13 billion raised in all of 2019, according to Goldman Sachs.
“Bubble-like sentiments surround SPACs,” said Goldman Sachs analysts.
Yusko disagreed with that sentiment, suggesting that Goldman Sachs’ criticism is useful because the Wall Street bank relies on traditional IPOs for some of its revenue.
“It’s intellectually lazy to make that statement,” he said. “To say SPACs are the problem is like saying hedge funds or mutual funds are the problem. It’s just a legal structure.”
Yusko said SPACs are cheaper, more flexible, and a smarter way to raise money than traditional IPOs.
Unlike the other two SPAC ETFs launched recently, Yusko’s fund is actively managed. That’s crucial, he said, because not all SPACs will be winners, especially given the loftiness of current market valuations.
“We are in an environment,” said Yusko, “where we think caution is warranted.”