U.S. Corporate Valuations Have Now Matched Their Dotcom Bubble Peak

During the first quarter of 2000, the dotcom bubble famously peaked after setting a new record high for corporate equity valuations. Today, we haven’t quite matched that record in terms of equities, though, by some measures, we are very close. And when you look at corporate valuations more comprehensively, including both debt and equity, we actually have now matched that prior period. The chart below shows the value of nonfinancial corporate debt and equity relative to nonfinancial gross value added (data provided by FRED), essentially a measure of enterprise value-to-sales. I’ll let you come to your own conclusion about what this might mean going forward.

(Click on image to enlarge)

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Disclosure: Information in “The Felder Report” (TFR), including all the information on the Felder Report ...

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