Gold Spot / U.S. Dollar
Education

From Tulips to Tech: The Evolution of Financial Bubbles

102
🎯 Introduction:

financial/economic bubbles are a recurring theme in economic history, this is often when a particular financial asset goes to unrealistic price levels often making money for early investors but usually these high price levels do not match their fundamental value this is then followed by a large public participation who also want a piece of the pie eventually with the price collapsing or sharply declining blowing or living investors in a large financial loss..

From 17th-century tulip gardens to 21st-century crypto manias, one thing has remained constant: Humans never learn.

Every generation thinks this time is different — but the pattern of bubbles keeps repeating.
Here's the crash course in 400 years of financial euphoria, panic, and pain.

🧠 Section 1: 1637 — Tulip Mania 🌷
snapshot
The original bubble.

In the Netherlands, rare tulip bulbs were worth more than houses.

Prices exploded... then collapsed 90% in a matter of weeks.

Lesson: Speculation + FOMO is not new. Humans were flipping flowers before they flipped crypto.

Mini Nerd Tip:
"When people stop caring about value and only care about price rising, watch out."

🧠 Section 2: 1720 — South Sea Bubble 📜
snapshot

Britain’s South Sea Company promised massive profits trading with South America (but barely did any business).

Politicians and aristocrats pumped the stock price.

Collapsed spectacularly → ruined many fortunes (including Isaac Newton himself:

"I can calculate the motion of heavenly bodies, but not the madness of men.")

Mini Nerd Tip:
"If a bubble needs government help to stay alive, it's already dying."

🧠 Section 3: 1929 — Wall Street Crash 🏛️
snapshot

Roaring 20s: endless optimism, cheap margin loans, "stocks only go up!"

1929: Stock market crashed, triggering the Great Depression.

People were buying stocks with 10% down and gambling recklessly.

Mini Nerd Tip:
"When leverage is everywhere, the smallest panic causes waterfalls."

🧠 Section 4: 2000 — Dotcom Bubble 💻
snapshot

Everyone thought the internet would change everything (it did — but slower and differently).

Companies with no profits were valued in billions.

"Eyeballs" were treated as real revenue.

NASDAQ lost 78% from top to bottom.

Mini Nerd Tip:
"Innovation creates real value... but hype inflates fake value faster."

🧠 Section 5: 2008 — Housing Bubble 🏡
snapshot

Banks handed out mortgages to anyone.

Financial engineering (CDOs, synthetic MBS) created the illusion of safety.

US housing prices collapsed → global financial crisis.

"Too Big to Fail" became the famous phrase.

Mini Nerd Tip:
"If everyone is getting rich easily, someone is lying or blind."

🧠 Section 6: 2017/2021 — Crypto & Meme Stocks 🚀
snapshot

Gamestop, Dogecoin, NFTs, Shiba Inu — the wildest "everyone’s a genius" market since the 1920s.

Social media + free apps = amplified bubble speed.

Massive rises, insane collapses.

Mini Nerd Tip:
"Technology changes, human emotion doesn’t."

🧠 Final Section: Why Bubbles Will Never End
Greed, fear, and FOMO are timeless.

Every era dresses up bubbles in new clothes (flowers, sea companies, internet, crypto).

Smart traders understand this pattern — and use it to survive and thrive.

"**Bubbles don't pop because of bad assets. They pop because confidence disappears


put together by : Pako Phutietsile as currencynerd
courtesy of : TradingView

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