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Dot-com bubble - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Dot Com Boom)
Tech stock speculative craze, c. 1995–2003

The NASDAQ Composite index spiked in 2000 and then fell sharply as a result of the dot-com bubble.
Quarterly U.S. table capital investments, 1995–2017

The dot-com bubble (or dot-com boom) was a stock market bubble that developed during the late 1990s and peaked on Friday, March 10, 2000. This period of market growth coincided with the widespread adoption of the World Wide Web and the Internet, resulting in a dispensation of available venture capital and the rapid growth of valuations in new dot-com startups. Between 1995 and its peak in March 2000, investments in the Nasdaq Composite stock market index rose by 600%,[citation needed] only to fall 78% from its peak by October 2002, giving up all its gains during the bubble. It is also known retrospectively as the tech–media–telecom (TMT) bubble, since it boosted established companies in those sectors as well as Internet startups.

During the dot-com crash, many online shopping companies like Pets.com, Webvan, and Boo.com, as well as several communication companies, such as WorldCom, NorthPoint Communications, and Global Crossing, failed and shut down;[1][2] WorldCom was renamed to MCI Inc. in 2003 and was acquired by Verizon in 2006. Others, like Lastminute.com, MP3.com and PeopleSound were bought out. Larger companies like Amazon and Cisco Systems lost large portions of their market capitalization, with Cisco losing 80% of its stock value.[2][3]

Background

[edit]

Historically, the dot-com boom can be seen as similar to a number of other technology-inspired booms of the past, including railroads in the 1840s, automobiles in the 1900s, radio in the 1920s, television in the 1940s, transistor electronics in the 1950s, computer time-sharing in the 1960s, and home computers and biotechnology in the 1980s.[4][failed verification]

Prelude to the bubble

[edit]
See also: 1990s United States boom

The 1993 release of Mosaic and subsequent web browsers during the following years gave computer users access to the World Wide Web, popularizing the use of the Internet.[5] Internet use increased as a result of the reduction of the "digital divide" and advances in connectivity, uses of the Internet, and computer education. Between 1990 and 1997, the percentage of households in the United States owning computers increased from 15% to 35% as computer ownership progressed from a luxury to a necessity.[6] This marked the shift to the Information Age, an economy based on information technology, and many new startups were founded as a result of that growth.

At the same time, a decline in interest rates increased the availability of capital.[7] The Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997, which lowered the top marginal capital gains tax in the United States, also made people more willing to make more speculative investments.[8] Alan Greenspan, then-Chair of the Federal Reserve, allegedly fueled investments in the stock market by putting a positive spin on stock valuations.[9] The Telecommunications Act of 1996 was expected to result in many new technologies from which many people wanted to profit.[10]

The bubble

[edit]

As a result of these factors, many investors were eager to invest, at any valuation, in any dot-com company, especially if it had one of the Internet-related prefixes or a ".com" suffix in its name. Venture capital was easy to raise. Investment banks, which profited significantly from initial public offerings (IPO) (almost all of them were on Nasdaq), fueled speculation and encouraged investment in technology.[11] A combination of rapidly increasing stock prices in the quaternary sector of the economy and confidence that the companies would turn future profits created an environment in which many investors were willing to overlook traditional metrics, such as the price–earnings ratio, and base confidence on technological advancements, leading to a stock market bubble.[9] Between 1995 and 2000, the Nasdaq Composite stock market index rose 400%. It reached a price–earnings ratio of 200, dwarfing the peak price–earnings ratio of 80 for the Japanese Nikkei 225 during the Japanese asset price bubble of 1991.[9] In 1999, shares of Qualcomm rose in value by 2,619%, 12 other large-cap stocks each rose over 1,000% in value, and seven additional large-cap stocks each rose over 900% in value. Even though the Nasdaq Composite rose 85.6% and the S&P 500 rose 19.5% in 1999, more stocks fell in value than rose in value as investors sold stocks in slower growing companies to invest in Internet stocks.[12]

An unprecedented amount of personal investing occurred during the boom and stories of people quitting their jobs to trade on the financial market were common.[13] The news media took advantage of the public's desire to invest in the stock market; an article in The Wall Street Journal suggested that investors "re-think" the "quaint idea" of profits,[14] and CNBC reported on the stock market with the same level of suspense as many networks provided to the broadcasting of sports events.[9][15]

At the height of the boom, it was possible for a promising dot-com company to become a public company via an IPO and raise a substantial amount of money even if it had never made a profit—or, in some cases, realized any material revenue or even have a finished product. People who received employee stock options became instant paper millionaires when their companies executed IPOs; however, most employees were barred from selling shares immediately due to lock-up periods.[11][page needed] The most successful entrepreneurs, such as Mark Cuban, sold their shares or entered into hedges to protect their gains. Sir John Templeton successfully shorted many dot-com stocks at the peak of the bubble during what he called "temporary insanity" and a "once-in-a-lifetime opportunity". He shorted stocks just before the expiration of lockup periods ending six months after initial public offerings, correctly anticipating many dot-com company executives would sell shares as soon as possible, and that large-scale selling would force down share prices.[16][17]

Spending tendencies of dot-com companies

[edit]
Dot-com companies spent most of their investments in marketing efforts. Left: A promotional music CD for the Modo pager. Right: The Pets.com sock puppet

Most dot-com companies incurred net operating losses as they spent heavily on advertising and promotions to harness network effects to build market share or mind share as fast as possible, using the mottos "get big fast" and "get large or get lost". These companies offered their services or products for free or at a discount with the expectation that they could build enough brand awareness to charge profitable rates for their services in the future.[18][19]

The "growth over profits" mentality and the aura of "new economy" invincibility led some companies to engage in lavish spending on elaborate business facilities and luxury vacations for employees. Upon the launch of a new product or website, a company would organize an expensive event called a dot-com party.[20][21]

Bubble in telecom

[edit]

In the five years after the American Telecommunications Act of 1996 went into effect, telecommunications equipment companies invested more than $500 billion, mostly financed with debt, into laying fiber optic cable, adding new switches, and building wireless networks.[10] In many areas, such as the Dulles Technology Corridor in Virginia, governments funded technology infrastructure and created favorable business and tax law to encourage companies to expand.[22] The growth in capacity vastly outstripped the growth in demand.[10] Spectrum auctions for 3G in the United Kingdom in April 2000, led by Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown, raised £22.5 billion.[23] In Germany, in August 2000, the auctions raised £30 billion.[24][25] A 3G spectrum auction in the United States in 1999 had to be re-run when the winners defaulted on their bids of $4 billion. The re-auction netted 10% of the original sales prices.[26][27] When financing became difficult to obtain as the bubble burst, high debt ratios of some companies led to a number of bankruptcies.[28] Bond investors recovered just over 20% of their investments.[29] However, several telecom executives sold stock before the crash including Philip Anschutz, who reaped $1.9 billion, Joseph Nacchio, who reaped $248 million, and Gary Winnick, who sold $748 million worth of shares.[30]

Bursting the bubble

[edit]
See also: Early 2000s recession
Historical government interest rates in the United States

Nearing the turn of the 2000s, spending on technology was volatile as companies prepared for the Year 2000 problem. There were concerns that computer systems would have trouble changing their clock and calendar systems from 1999 to 2000 which might trigger wider social or economic problems, but there was virtually no impact or disruption due to adequate preparation.[31] Spending on marketing also reached new heights for the sector: Two dot-com companies purchased ad spots for Super Bowl XXXIII, and 17 dot-com companies bought ad spots the following year for Super Bowl XXXIV.[32]

On January 10, 2000, America Online, led by Steve Case and Ted Leonsis, announced a merger with Time Warner, led by Gerald M. Levin. The merger was the largest to date and was questioned by many analysts.[33] Then, on January 30, 2000, 12 ads of the 61 ads for Super Bowl XXXIV were purchased by dot-coms (sources state ranges from 12 up to 19 companies depending on the definition of dot-com company). At that time, the cost for a 30-second commercial was between $1.9 million and $2.2 million.[34][35]

Meanwhile, Alan Greenspan, then Chair of the Federal Reserve, raised interest rates several times; these actions were believed by many[weasel words] to have caused the bursting of the dot-com bubble. According to Paul Krugman, however, "he didn't raise interest rates to curb the market's enthusiasm; he didn't even seek to impose margin requirements on stock market investors. Instead, [it is alleged] he waited until the bubble burst, as it did in 2000, then tried to clean up the mess afterward".[36] Finance author and commentator E. Ray Canterbery agreed with Krugman's criticism.[37]

On Friday March 10, 2000, the NASDAQ Composite stock market index peaked at 5,048.62.[38] However, on March 13, 2000, news that Japan had once again entered a recession triggered a global sell off that disproportionately affected technology stocks.[39] Soon after, Yahoo! and eBay ended merger talks and the Nasdaq fell 2.6%, but the S&P 500 rose 2.4% as investors shifted from strong performing technology stocks to poor performing established stocks.[40]

On March 20, 2000, Barron's featured a cover article titled "Burning Up; Warning: Internet companies are running out of cash—fast", which predicted the imminent bankruptcy of many Internet companies.[41] This led many people to rethink their investments. That same day, MicroStrategy announced a revenue restatement due to aggressive accounting practices. Its stock price, which had risen from $7 per share to as high as $333 per share in a year, fell to $140 per share, or 62%, in a day.[42] The next day, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates, leading to an inverted yield curve, although stocks rallied temporarily.[43]

Tangentially to all of speculation, Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson issued his conclusions of law in the case of United States v. Microsoft Corp. (2001) and ruled that Microsoft was guilty of monopolization and tying in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. This led to a one-day 15% decline in the value of shares in Microsoft and a 350-point, or 8%, drop in the value of the Nasdaq. Many people saw the legal actions as bad for technology in general.[44] That same day, Bloomberg News published a widely read article that stated: "It's time, at last, to pay attention to the numbers".[45]

On Friday, April 14, 2000, the Nasdaq Composite index fell 9%, ending a week in which it fell 25%. Investors were forced to sell stocks ahead of Tax Day, the due date to pay taxes on gains realized in the previous year.[46] By June 2000, dot-com companies were forced to reevaluate their spending on advertising campaigns.[47] On November 9, 2000, Pets.com, a much-hyped company that had backing from Amazon.com, went out of business only nine months after completing its IPO.[48][49] By that time, most Internet stocks had declined in value by 75% from their highs, wiping out $1.755 trillion in value.[50] In January 2001, just three dot-com companies bought advertising spots during Super Bowl XXXV.[51] The September 11 attacks accelerated the stock-market drop.[52] Investor confidence was further eroded by several accounting scandals and the resulting bankruptcies, including the Enron scandal in October 2001, the WorldCom scandal in June 2002,[53] and the Adelphia Communications Corporation scandal in July 2002.[54]

By the end of the stock market downturn of 2002, stocks had lost $5 trillion in market capitalization since the peak.[55] At its trough on October 9, 2002, the NASDAQ-100 had dropped to 1,114, down 78% from its peak.[56][57]

Aftermath

[edit]
See also: List of companies affected by the dot-com bubble

After venture capital was no longer available, the operational mentality of executives and investors completely changed. A dot-com company's lifespan was measured by its burn rate, the rate at which it spent its existing capital. Many dot-com companies ran out of capital and went through liquidation. Supporting industries, such as advertising and shipping, scaled back their operations as demand for services fell. However, many companies were able to endure the crash; 48% of dot-com companies survived through 2004, albeit at lower valuations.[18]

Several companies and their executives, including Bernard Ebbers, Jeffrey Skilling, and Kenneth Lay, were accused or convicted of fraud for misusing shareholders' money, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission levied large fines against investment firms including Citigroup and Merrill Lynch for misleading investors.[58]

After suffering losses, retail investors transitioned their investment portfolios to more cautious positions.[59] Popular Internet forums that focused on high tech stocks, such as Silicon Investor, Yahoo! Finance, and The Motley Fool declined in use significantly.[60]

Job market and office equipment glut

[edit]

Layoffs of programmers resulted in a general glut in the job market. University enrollment for computer-related degrees dropped noticeably.[61][62] Aeron chairs, which retailed for $1,100 each, were liquidated en masse.[63]

Legacy

[edit]

As growth in the technology sector stabilized, companies consolidated; some, such as Amazon.com, eBay, Nvidia and Google, gained market share and came to dominate their respective fields. The most valuable public companies are now generally in the technology sector.[citation needed]

In a 2015 book, venture capitalist Fred Wilson, who funded many dot-com companies and lost 90% of his net worth when the bubble burst, said about the dot-com bubble:

A friend of mine has a great line. He says "Nothing important has ever been built without irrational exuberance." Meaning that you need some of this mania to cause investors to open up their pocketbooks and finance the building of the railroads or the automobile or aerospace industry or whatever. And in this case, much of the capital invested was lost, but also much of it was invested in a very high throughput backbone for the Internet, and lots of software that works, and databases and server structure. All that stuff has allowed what we have today, which has changed all our lives... that's what all this speculative mania built.[64]

See also

[edit]
  • icon1990s portal
  • 2000s portal
  • iconEconomics portal
  • iconInternet portal
  • AI boom
  • AI bubble
  • Cryptocurrency bubble
  • List of stock market crashes and bear markets
  • Stock market crash

References

[edit]
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Further reading

[edit]
  • Abramson, Bruce (2005). Digital Phoenix; Why the Information Economy Collapsed and How it Will Rise Again. MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-51196-4.
  • Aharon, David Y.; Gavious, Ilanit; Yosef, Rami (2010). "Stock market bubble effects on mergers and acquisitions". The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance. 50 (4): 456–70. doi:10.1016/j.qref.2010.05.002.
  • Cassidy, John (2009). Dot.con: How America Lost Its Mind and Its Money in the Internet Era. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780061841781.
  • Cellan-Jones, Rory (2001). Dot.Bomb: The Rise and Fall of Dot.com Britain. Aurum. ISBN 978-1854107909.
  • Daisey, Mike (2014). Twenty-one Dog Years: Doing Time at Amazon.com. Free Press. ISBN 978-0-7432-2580-9.
  • Goldfarb, Brent D.; Kirsch, David; Miller, David A. (April 24, 2006). "Was There Too Little Entry During the Dot Com Era?". Robert H. Smith School Research Paper (RHS 06-029). SSRN 899100.
  • Kindleberger, Charles P. (2005). Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9780230365353.[permanent dead link]
  • Kuo, David (2001). dot.bomb: My Days and Nights at an Internet Goliath. Little, Brown. ISBN 978-0-316-60005-7.
  • Lowenstein, Roger (2004). Origins of the Crash: The Great Bubble and Its Undoing. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-1-59420-003-8.
  • Wolff, Michael (1999). Burn Rate: How I Survived the Gold Rush Years on the Internet. Orion Publishing Group. ISBN 9780752826066. Burn Rate at Google Books.
  • v
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Dot-com bubble
People
  • Daniel Aegerter
  • Marc Andreessen
  • Bob Bernard
  • Jeff Bezos
  • Henry Blodget
  • James H. Clark
  • Cynthia Cooper
  • Bob Davis
  • Bernard Ebbers
  • David Filo
  • Charlie Gasparino
  • Richard Grasso
  • Alan Greenspan
  • Jack Grubman
  • Josh Harris
  • Jeff Hawkins
  • Howard Jonas
  • Gerry Kearby
  • Timothy Koogle
  • Kenneth Lay
  • Arthur Levitt
  • Mary Meeker
  • PayPal Mafia
  • Kevin O'Leary
  • Jason Olim
  • Stephan Paternot
  • Jim Rutt
  • Michael J. Saylor
  • Jeffrey Skilling
  • Eliot Spitzer
  • Scott D. Sullivan
  • Kaleil Isaza Tuzman
  • Julie Wainwright
  • Jerry Yang
Companies
  • 3Com
  • 360networks
  • AboveNet
  • Actua Corporation
  • Airspan Networks
  • Akamai Technologies
  • Alteon WebSystems
  • Amazon
  • America Online
  • Arthur Andersen
  • Ask Jeeves
  • Blue Coat Systems
  • Boo.com
  • Books-A-Million
  • Broadband Sports
  • Broadcast.com
  • CDNow
  • Chemdex
  • CMGI Inc.
  • Cobalt Networks
  • Commerce One
  • Covad
  • Cyberian Outpost
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  • Digex
  • Digital Convergence Corporation
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  • DoubleClick
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  • eGain
  • Egghead Software
  • Enron
  • Epidemic Marketing
  • Excite
  • Flooz.com
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  • iVillage
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  • The Learning Company
  • Liquid Audio
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  • Lycos
    • Angelfire
    • Tripod
  • MarchFirst
  • Merrill Lynch
  • MicroStrategy
  • Net2Phone
  • NetBank
  • Netscape
  • Network Solutions
  • NorthPoint Communications
  • OmniSky
  • Palm, Inc.
  • PayPal
  • Pets.com
  • PFSweb
  • Pixelon
  • PLX Technology
  • Prodigy
  • Pseudo.com
  • Radvision
  • Razorfish
  • Redback Networks
  • Register.com
  • Ritmoteca.com
  • Savvis
  • Scout Electromedia
    • modo
  • Terra
  • theGlobe.com
  • Think Tools
  • TIBCO Software
  • Tradex Technologies
  • Transmeta
  • uBid
  • United Online
  • USinternetworking
  • UUNET
  • VA Linux Systems
  • Verio
  • VerticalNet
  • Vignette Corporation
  • WebChat Broadcasting System
  • Websense
  • Webvan
  • WorldCom
  • World Online
  • Yahoo!
History
  • Enron scandal
  • Irrational exuberance
  • Sarbanes–Oxley Act
  • Telecoms crash
  • Trial of Kenneth Lay and Jeffrey Skilling
  • WorldCom scandal
Publications
  • Blood on the Street
  • Conspiracy of Fools
  • The Industry Standard
  • The PayPal Wars
Broadcast media
  • e-Dreams
  • Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room
  • Startup.com
  • Valley of the Boom
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Financial bubbles
  • Market trend
  • Credit cycle
  • Irrational exuberance
  • Social contagion
  • Real-estate bubble
  • Stock market bubble
Commercial revolution
(1000–1760)
  • Tulip mania (1634–1637)
  • Mississippi bubble (1684–1720)
  • South Sea bubble (1711–1720)
  • Bengal Bubble of 1769 (1757–1769)
1st Industrial Revolution
(1760–1840)
  • Canal Mania (c. 1790–c. 1810)
  • Carolina gold rush (1802–1825)
  • 1810s Alabama real estate bubble
  • Georgia Gold Rush (1828–c. 1840)
  • 1830s Chicago real estate bubble
  • Chilean silver rush (1832–1850)
1840–1870
  • Railway Mania (c. 1840–c. 1850)
  • California gold rush (1848–1855)
  • Queen Charlottes Gold Rush (1851)
  • Victorian gold rush (1851–c. 1870)
  • New South Wales gold rush (1851–1880)
  • Australian gold rushes (1851–1914)
  • Fraser Canyon Gold Rush (1858)
  • Pike's Peak gold rush (1858–1861)
  • Rock Creek Gold Rush (1859)
  • Pennsylvania oil rush (1859–1891)
  • Similkameen Gold Rush (1860)
  • Stikine Gold Rush (1861)
  • Colorado River mining boom (1861–1864)
  • Otago gold rush (1861–1864)
  • Cariboo Gold Rush (1861–1867)
  • First Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1861–1874)
  • West Coast gold rush (1864–1867)
  • Big Bend Gold Rush (c. 1865)
  • Vermilion Lake gold rush (1865–1867)
  • Kildonan Gold Rush (1869)
  • Omineca Gold Rush (1869)
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
  • 1870s Lapland gold rush
  • Coromandel Gold Rushes (c. 1870–c. 1890)
  • Cassiar Gold Rush (c. 1870–c. 1890)
  • Black Hills gold rush (1874–1880)
  • Colorado Silver Boom (1879–1893)
  • Western Australian gold rushes (c. 1880–c. 1900)
  • Indiana gas boom (c. 1880–1903)
  • Ohio oil rush (c. 1880–c. 1930)
  • Tierra del Fuego gold rush (1883–1906)
  • Cayoosh Gold Rush (1884)
  • Witwatersrand Gold Rush (1886)
  • Encilhamento (1886–1890)
  • Cripple Creek Gold Rush (c. 1890–c. 1910)
  • Klondike Gold Rush (1896–1899)
  • Second Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1896–1903)
  • Kobuk River Stampede (1897–1899)
  • Mount Baker gold rush (1897–c. 1925)
  • Nome Gold Rush (1899–1909)
  • Fairbanks Gold Rush (c. 1900–1918)
  • Texas oil boom (1901–1918)
  • Cobalt silver rush (1903–1918)
  • Porcupine Gold Rush (1909–1918)
Interwar period
(1918–1939)
  • 1920s Florida land boom (c. 1920–1925)
  • Fairbanks Gold Rush (1918–c. 1930)
  • Texas oil boom (1918–1945)
  • Cobalt silver rush (1918–c. 1930)
  • Porcupine Gold Rush (1918–1945)
  • 1930s Kakamega gold rush
  • Third Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1932–1942)
Post–WWII expansion
(1945–1973)
  • Texas oil boom (1945–c. 1950)
  • Porcupine Gold Rush (1945–c. 1960)
  • Poseidon bubble (1969–1970)
The Great Inflation
(1973–1982)
  • 1970s commodities boom
  • Mexican oil boom (1977–1981)
  • Silver Thursday (1980)
  • New Zealand property bubble (c. 1980–1982)
Great Moderation/
Great Regression
(1982–2007)
  • 1980s oil glut
  • New Zealand property bubble (1982–)
  • Spanish property bubble (1985–2008)
  • Japanese asset price bubble (1986–1990)
  • Dot-com bubble (1995–2000)
  • Baltic states housing bubble (2000–2006)
  • Irish property bubble (c. 2000–2007)
  • 2000s commodities boom (2000–2008)
  • 2000s Danish property bubble (2001–2006)
  • United States housing bubble (2002–2006)
  • Romanian property bubble (2002–2007)
  • Polish property bubble (2002–2008)
  • Canadian property bubble (2002–)
  • Chinese property bubble (2005–2011)
  • Lebanese housing bubble (2005–2008)
  • Chinese stock bubble of 2007
  • Uranium bubble of 2007
Information Age
(2007–present)
  • 2000s commodities boom (2008–2014)
  • Lebanese housing bubble (2008–)
  • Corporate debt bubble (2008–)
  • Australian property bubble (2010–)
  • Cryptocurrency bubble (2011–)
  • Everything bubble (2020–21)
  • AI bubble (2022–)
  • Carbon bubble
  • Green bubble
  • Social media stock bubble
  • Unicorn bubble
  • U.S. higher education bubble
  • v
  • t
  • e
Financial crises
  • Bank run
  • Commodity price shocks
  • Credit crunch
  • Credit cycle
  • Currency crisis
  • Debt crisis
  • Energy crisis
  • Financial contagion
    • Social contagion
  • Flash crash
  • Hyperinflation
  • Liquidity crisis
    • Accounting
    • Capital
    • Funding
    • Market
  • Minsky moment
  • Social crisis
  • Stock market crash
Pre-1000
  • Financial crisis of 33 CE
  • Crisis of the Third Century (235–284 CE)
Commercial revolution
(1000–1760)
  • Great Bullion Famine (c. 1400–c. 1500)
  • The Great Debasement (1544–1551)
  • Spanish Price Revolution (c. 1550–c. 1650)
  • Dutch Republic stock market crashes (c. 1600–1760)
  • Kipper und Wipper (1621–1623)
  • Tulip mania (1637)
  • South Sea bubble (1720)
  • Mississippi bubble (1720)
1st Industrial Revolution
(1760–1840)
  • Amsterdam banking crisis of 1763
  • Bengal Bubble of 1769 (1769–1784)
  • British credit crisis of 1772–1773
  • Dutch Republic financial collapse (c. 1780–1795)
  • Copper Panic of 1789
  • Panic of 1792
  • Panic of 1796–1797
  • Danish state bankruptcy of 1813
  • Post-Napoleonic Irish grain price and land use shocks (1815–1816)
  • Panic of 1819
  • Panic of 1825
  • Panic of 1837
1840–1870
  • European potato failure (1845–1856)
    • Great Irish Famine
    • Highland Potato Famine
  • Panic of 1847
  • Panic of 1857
  • Panic of 1866
  • Black Friday (1869)
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
  • Panic of 1873
  • Paris Bourse crash of 1882
  • Panic of 1884
  • Arendal crash (1886)
  • Baring crisis (1890)
  • Encilhamento (1890–1893)
  • Panic of 1893
  • Australian banking crisis of 1893
  • Black Monday (1894)
  • Panic of 1896
  • Panic of 1901
  • Panic of 1907
  • Shanghai rubber stock market crisis (1910)
  • Panic of 1910–11
  • Financial crisis of 1914
Interwar period
(1918–1939)
  • Early Soviet hyperinflation (1917–1924)
  • Weimar Republic hyperinflation (1921–1923)
  • Shōwa financial crisis (1927)
  • Wall Street crash of 1929
  • Panic of 1930
  • Chinese hyperinflation (1937–1950)
Wartime period
(1939–1945)
  • Greek hyperinflation (1941–1946)
  • Chinese hyperinflation (1937–1950)
Post–WWII expansion
(1945–1973)
  • Hungarian pengő hyperinflation (1945–1946)
  • Kennedy Slide of 1962
  • 1963–1965 Indonesian hyperinflation
  • Chinese hyperinflation (1937–1950)
Great Inflation
(1973–1982)
  • 1970s energy crisis (1973–1980)
  • 1973 oil crisis
  • 1973–1974 stock market crash
  • Secondary banking crisis of 1973–1975
  • Steel crisis (1973–1982)
  • Latin American debt crisis (1975–1982)
  • 1976 sterling crisis
  • 1979 oil crisis
  • Brazilian hyperinflation (1980–1982)
Great Moderation/
Great Regression
(1982–2007)
  • Brazilian hyperinflation (1982–1994)
  • Souk Al-Manakh stock market crash (1982)
  • Chilean crisis of 1982
  • 1983 Israel bank stock crisis
  • Black Saturday (1983)
  • Savings and loan crisis (1986–1995)
  • Cameroonian economic crisis (1987–2000s)
  • Black Monday (1987)
  • 1988–1992 Norwegian banking crisis
  • Japanese asset price bubble crash (1990–1992)
  • Rhode Island banking crisis (1990–1992)
  • 1991 Indian economic crisis
  • 1990–1994 Swedish financial crisis
  • 1990s Finnish banking crisis
  • 1990s Armenian energy crisis
  • Cuban Special Period (1991–2000)
  • Black Wednesday (1992 Sterling crisis)
  • Hyperinflation in Serbia and Montenegro (1992–1994)
  • 1994 bond market crisis
  • Venezuelan banking crisis of 1994
  • 1994 Papua New Guinea financial crisis
  • Mexican peso crisis (1994–1996)
  • 1997 Asian financial crisis
  • October 27, 1997, mini-crash
  • 1998 Russian financial crisis
  • 1998–1999 Ecuador economic crisis
  • 1998–2002 Argentine great depression
  • Samba effect (1999)
  • Dot-com bubble (2000–2004)
  • 9/11 stock market crash (2001)
  • 2001 Turkish economic crisis
  • South American economic crisis of 2002
  • Stock market downturn of 2002
  • 2002 Uruguay banking crisis
  • 2003 Myanmar banking crisis
  • 2000s energy crisis (2003–2008)
  • 2004 Argentine energy crisis
  • Chinese stock bubble of 2007
  • Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe (2007–present)
Great Recession
(2007–2009)
  • 2008 financial crisis
    • September 2008
    • October 2008
    • November 2008
    • December 2008
    • 2009
    • Subprime mortgage crisis
    • 2000s U.S. housing market correction
    • U.S. bear market of 2007–2009
    • 2008 Latvian financial crisis
    • 2008–2009 Belgian financial crisis
    • Great Recession in Russia
    • 2008–2009 Ukrainian financial crisis
    • 2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis
    • Post-2008 Irish banking crisis
    • 2008–2014 Spanish financial crisis
    • Blue Monday Crash 2009
    • Euro area crisis
    • Greek government-debt crisis
Information Age
(2009–present)
  • 2009 Dubai debt standstill
  • Venezuelan banking crisis of 2009–2010
  • 2010–2014 Portuguese financial crisis
  • Energy crisis in Venezuela (2010–present)
  • Syrian economic crisis (2011–present)
  • August 2011 stock markets fall
  • 2011 Bangladesh share market scam
  • 2012–2013 Cypriot financial crisis
  • Chinese Banking Liquidity Crisis of 2013
  • Venezuela economic crisis (2013–present)
  • 2014 Brazilian economic crisis
  • Puerto Rican government-debt crisis (2014–2022)
  • Russian financial crisis (2014–2016)
  • 2015–16 Nepal blockade
  • 2015–2016 Chinese stock market turbulence
  • 2015–2016 stock market selloff
  • Brexit stock market crash (2016)
  • Hyperinflation in Venezuela (2016–2022)
  • 2017 Sri Lankan fuel crisis
  • Ghana banking crisis (2017–2018)
  • Turkish economic crisis (2018–current)
  • Lebanese liquidity crisis (2019–present)
  • Sri Lankan economic crisis (2019–2024)
  • COVID-19 pandemic
    • Financial market impact
    • 2020 stock market crash
    • Recession
  • Chinese property sector crisis (2020–present)
  • 2021–2023 inflation surge
  • 2022 Russian financial crisis
  • Pakistani economic crisis (2021–2024)
  • 2022 stock market decline
  • German economic crisis (2022–present)
  • 2023 United States banking crisis
  • 2023–2024 Egyptian financial crisis
  • 2025 stock market crash
  • List of banking crises
  • List of economic crises
  • List of sovereign debt crises
  • List of stock market crashes and bear markets
  • v
  • t
  • e
Economic history of the United States and Commonwealth of Nations countries
Commercial revolution
(1000–1760)
  • Great Bullion Famine (c. 1400–c. 1500)
  • Great Slump (1430–1490)
  • The Great Debasement (1544–1551)
  • Financial Revolution (1690–1800)
  • Slump of 1706
  • Great Frost of 1709
  • South Sea bubble (1713–1720)
  • Mississippi bubble (1717–1720)
  • Economic impact of the Seven Years' War (1754–1763)
1st Industrial Revolution/
Market Revolution
(1760–1870)
  • Industrial Revolution
    • Scotland
    • United States
    • Wales
  • Bengal Bubble of 1769 (1769–1784)
  • British credit crisis of 1772–1773
  • American Revolutionary War inflation (1775–1783)
  • Panic of 1785 (1785–1788)
  • Copper Panic of 1789/Panic of 1792 (1789–1793)
  • Canal Mania (c. 1790–c. 1810)
  • Panic of 1796–1797 (1796–1799)
  • 1802–1804 recession
  • Carolina gold rush (1802–1825)
  • Depression of 1807 (1807–1810)
  • 1810s Alabama real estate bubble
    • Alabama Fever
  • 1812 recession
  • Post-Napoleonic Depression (1815–1821)
  • 1822–23 recession
  • Panic of 1825
  • Panic of 1826
  • 1828–29 recession
  • Georgia Gold Rush (1828–c. 1840)
  • 1830s Chicago real estate bubble
  • 1833–34 recession
  • Panic of 1837 (1836–1838 and 1839–1843)
  • U.S. state defaults in the 1840s
  • Railway Mania (c. 1840–c. 1850)
  • Plank Road Boom (1844–c. 1855)
  • 1845–46 recession
  • Panic of 1847 (1847–1848)
  • California gold rush (1848–1855)
  • British Columbia gold rushes
    • Queen Charlottes Gold Rush, 1851
    • Fraser Canyon Gold Rush, 1858
    • Rock Creek Gold Rush, 1859
    • Similkameen Gold Rush, 1860
    • Stikine Gold Rush, 1861
    • Cariboo Gold Rush, 1861–1867
    • Wild Horse Creek Gold Rush, 1863–1870
    • Leechtown Gold Rush, 1864–1865
    • Big Bend Gold Rush, c. 1865
    • Omineca Gold Rush, 1869
  • Victorian gold rush (1851–c. 1870)
  • New South Wales gold rush (1851–1880)
  • Australian gold rushes (1851–1914)
  • 1853–54 recession
  • Panic of 1857 (1857–1858)
  • Pike's Peak gold rush (1858–1861)
  • Pennsylvania oil rush (1859–1891)
  • 1860–61 recession
  • Colorado River mining boom (1861–1864)
  • Otago gold rush (1861–1864)
  • U.S. Civil War economy (1861–1865)
  • First Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1861–1874)
  • West Coast gold rush (1864–1867)
  • Panic of 1866 (1865–1867)
  • Vermilion Lake gold rush (1865–1867)
  • Kildonan Gold Rush (1869)
  • Black Friday (1869–1870)
Gilded Age/
2nd Industrial Revolution
(1870–1914)
  • Coromandel Gold Rushes (c. 1870–c. 1890)
  • Cassiar Gold Rush (c. 1870–c. 1890)
  • Long Depression
    • 1873–1879; Panic of 1873
  • Black Hills gold rush (1874–1880)
  • Colorado Silver Boom (1879–1893)
  • Western Australian gold rushes (c. 1880–c. 1900)
  • Indiana gas boom (c. 1880–1903)
  • Ohio oil rush (c. 1880–c. 1930)
  • Depression of 1882–1885
    • Panic of 1884
  • Cayoosh Gold Rush (1884)
  • Witwatersrand Gold Rush (1886)
  • 1887–88 recession
  • Baring crisis (1890–1891)
  • Cripple Creek Gold Rush (c. 1890–c. 1910)
  • Panic of 1893 (1893–1897)
  • Australian banking crisis of 1893
  • Black Monday (1894)
  • Panic of 1896
  • Klondike Gold Rush (1896–1899)
  • Second Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1896–1903)
  • Kobuk River Stampede (1897–1899)
  • Mount Baker gold rush (1897–c. 1925)
  • 1899–1900 recession
  • Nome Gold Rush (1899–1909)
  • Fairbanks Gold Rush (c. 1900–c. 1930)
  • Texas oil boom (1901–c. 1950)
  • Panic of 1901 (1902–1904)
  • Cobalt silver rush (1903–c. 1930)
  • Panic of 1907 (1907–1908)
  • Porcupine Gold Rush (1909–c. 1960)
  • Panic of 1910–11 (1910–1912)
  • Financial crisis of 1914 (1913–14)
World War home fronts/
Interwar period
(1914–1945)
  • World War I economy and home fronts
    • Australia
    • Canada
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
  • Post–World War I recession (1918–1919)
  • Recession of 1920–1921
  • 1920s Florida land boom (c. 1920–1925)
  • Roaring Twenties
  • 1923–1924 recession
  • 1926–1927 recession
  • Great Depression
    • 1929–1939; Wall Street crash of 1929
    • Panic of 1930
    • Great Contraction, 1929–1933
    • Recession of 1937–1938
    • Australia
    • Canada
    • India
    • South Africa
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
  • 1930s Kakamega gold rush
  • Third Nova Scotia Gold Rush (1932–1942)
  • World War II home front
    • Australia
    • Canada
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
Post–WWII expansion/
1970s stagflation
(1945–1982)
  • Great Compression
  • 1945 recession
  • Recession of 1949 (1948–1949)
  • Hong Kong and Singapore Asian Tiger expansions (1950–1990)
  • 1951 Canada recession
  • Recession of 1953 (1953–1954)
  • Recession of 1958 (1957–1958)
  • Recession of 1960–1961
  • Kennedy Slide of 1962
  • Poseidon bubble (1969–1970)
  • Recession of 1969–1970
  • 1970s commodities boom
  • 1973–1975 recession
    • 1973–1974 stock market crash
    • Secondary banking crisis of 1973–1975
  • 1970s energy crisis
    • 1973–1980; 1973 oil crisis
    • 1979 oil crisis
  • Steel crisis (1973–1982)
  • 1976 sterling crisis
  • Silver Thursday (1980)
  • Early 1980s recession
    • 1980–1982; United States
Computer Age/
Second Gilded Age
(1982–present)
  • Great Moderation (1982–2007)
  • 1980s oil glut
  • Black Saturday (1983)
  • New Zealand property bubble (c. 1985–)
  • Savings and loan crisis (1986–1995)
  • Black Monday (1987)
  • Friday the 13th mini-crash (1989)
  • Early 1990s recession
    • 1990–1991; Australia
    • United States
  • 1990 oil price shock
  • Rhode Island banking crisis (1990–1992)
  • 1991 Indian economic crisis
  • 1990s United States boom (1991–2001)
  • 1990s India economic boom
  • Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe (1991–present)
  • Black Wednesday (1992)
  • 1994 bond market crisis
  • 1994 Papua New Guinea financial crisis
  • Dot-com bubble
    • 1995–2004; Stock market downturn of 2002
  • 1997 Asian financial crisis
    • October 27, 1997, mini-crash
  • Early 2000s recession
    • 2001; 9/11 stock market crash
  • 2000s commodities boom (2000–2014)
  • United States housing bubble (2002–2006)
  • Canadian property bubble (2002–)
  • 2003 Myanmar banking crisis
  • 2000s energy crisis (2003–2008)
  • North Dakota oil boom (2006–2015)
  • Uranium bubble of 2007
  • Great Recession
    • 2007–2009; Australia and New Zealand
    • Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka
    • British West Indies
    • Canada
    • South Africa
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
  • 2008 financial crisis
    • September
    • October
    • November
    • December
    • 2009
    • Subprime mortgage crisis
    • 2000s U.S. housing market correction
    • U.S. bear market of 2007–2009
    • 2007–2010 U.S. bank failures
  • Corporate debt bubble (2008–)
  • Blue Monday Crash 2009
  • 2010 flash crash
  • Malaysia Tiger Cub expansion (2010s)
  • Australian property bubble (2010–)
  • August 2011 stock markets fall
    • Black Monday
  • 2011 Bangladesh share market scam
  • Cryptocurrency bubble (2011–)
  • Puerto Rican government-debt crisis (2014–2022)
  • 2015–2016 stock market selloff
  • Brexit stock market crash (2016)
  • 2017 Sri Lankan fuel crisis
  • Ghana banking crisis (2017–2018)
  • Sri Lankan economic crisis (2019–2024)
  • COVID-19 recession
    • 2020–2022; 2020 stock market crash
    • financial market impact
    • sectoral impacts
    • shortages
    • Canada
    • India
    • Malaysia
    • New Zealand
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
  • 2020s commodities boom
  • Global energy crisis
    • 2021–2023; 2021 United Kingdom natural gas supplier crisis
    • regional effects
  • 2021–2023 global supply chain crisis
  • 2021–2023 inflation surge
  • Pakistani economic crisis (2021–2024)
  • 2022 stock market decline
  • 2022–2023 global food crises
  • 2023 United Kingdom recession
  • 2023 United States banking crisis
  • 2025 stock market crash
Countries and sectors
  • Australia
    • rail transport
    • slavery
    • whaling/Western Australia
  • Canada
    • agriculture
    • currencies
    • early banking system
    • list of recessions
    • petroleum industry
    • rail transport
    • slavery
    • technological and industrial
    • whaling/Pacific Northwest
  • Ghana
  • India
    • agriculture
    • Company rule
    • maritime
    • British Raj
    • Deindustrialisation
    • salt tax
    • slavery
  • Malaysia
  • New Zealand
    • whaling
  • Nigeria
    • slavery
  • Pakistan
    • maritime
    • rail transport
  • South Africa
    • slavery
    • whaling
  • Uganda
  • United Kingdom
    • Agricultural Revolution
    • Atlantic slave trade
    • banking
    • British Empire
    • English fiscal system
    • Interwar unemployment and poverty
    • list of recessions
    • maritime/England/Scotland
    • Middle Ages England/agriculture
    • national debt
    • Scotland/agriculture/Middle Ages
    • rail transport/pre–1830/1830–1922/1923–1947/1948–1994/1995–present
    • slavery
    • trade unions
    • Victorian era
    • Wales
    • whaling/Scotland
  • United States
    • agriculture
    • banking/colonial-era credit/cooperatives/investment banking/wildcat banking
    • business
    • central banking
    • coal mining
    • indentured servitude
    • iron and steel industry
    • labor
    • list of economic expansions
    • list of recessions
    • lumber industry
    • maritime/colonial-era/1776–1799/1800–1899/1900–1999/2000–present
    • monetary policy
    • poverty
    • petroleum industry/oil shale
    • public debt
    • rail transportation
    • slavery/colonial-era slavery/forced labor/slave trade/slave markets
    • tariffs
    • taxation
    • technological and industrial
    • United States dollar
    • whaling
  • Zimbabwe
Business cycle topics
  • Aggregate demand/Supply
    • Effective demand
    • General glut
    • Model
    • Overproduction
    • Paradox of thrift
    • Price-and-wage stickiness
    • Underconsumption
  • Inflation and unemployment
    • Chronic
    • Classical dichotomy
    • Debasement
    • Debt monetization
    • Demand-pull/cost-push/built-in inflation
    • Deflation
    • Disinflation
    • Full employment
    • Hyperinflation
    • Money supply/demand
    • NAIRU
    • Natural rate of unemployment
    • Neutrality of money
    • Phillips curve
    • Price level
    • Real and nominal value
    • Sahm rule
    • Velocity of money
  • Expansion
    • Miracle
    • Recovery
    • Stagnation
  • Interest rate
    • Nominal interest rate
    • Real interest rate
    • Yield curve/Inverted
  • Recession
    • Balance sheet
    • Depression
    • Global
    • Rolling
    • Shapes
    • Stagflation
  • Shock
    • Demand
    • Supply
Credit cycle topics
  • Financial bubble
    • Commodity booms/diamond rush/gold rush/oil boom
    • Real-estate bubble/housing bubble/boomtown/ghost town
    • Speculation
    • Stock market bubble
  • Financial crisis
    • Bank run/bank failure
    • Commodity price shocks
    • Credit crunch
    • Currency crisis
    • Debt crisis
    • Energy crisis
    • Liquidity crisis/accounting/capital/funding/market
    • Minsky moment/leverage cycle
    • Stock market crash/Flash crash
  • Social contagion
    • Financial contagion
    • Irrational exuberance
    • Market trend
  • Proposed bubbles
    • AI bubble/AI boom/Fourth Industrial Revolution/Imagination Age
    • Carbon bubble/Age of Oil/Peak oil
    • Everything bubble
    • Green bubble
    • Social media stock bubble
    • Unicorn bubble
    • U.S. higher education bubble
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