The dot.com bubble - for iPad/Mac/PC Podcast
1) The dot.com bubble
A short introduction to this album
2) What are economic bubbles?
Bubbles are when a products value continues to rise beyond its true value. But what happens when the bubble inevitably bursts?
3) Types of economic bubbles
Intrinsic bubbles, informational bubbles, classic bubbles and fads are all the results of over valued products.
4) The dot.com boom
Tom Hadfield was only 12 years old when he set up the internet sensation Soccernet, by the time he was 17 years old he sold the company to ESPN for $40million dollars.
5) Does the media fuel bubbles?
The dot.com bubble wasn't just confined to the investment and trading community, the public also got involved, and this caused a media frenzy.
6) How was the dot.com market valued?
The dot.com's equity was valued on visits and clicks. There was nothing to research, traditional valuing techniques went out the window.
7) The dot.com crash
Once the dot.com market started to crack, investors soon realised that these internet companies weren't really worth anything at all, but was this enough for them sell up before the bubble burst?
8) Dot.com and the public damage
When a bubbles bursts the immediate effect is damage to the public. But is there any longer lasting positive effect on the economy?
9) The bubbles of today
Is green technology the beginning of a new bubble? Can we spot a bubble emerging? Is there anything that can be done when a bubble does emerge?
10) Bubbles in context
The Open University’s Martin Upton, Jonquil Lowe and Alan Shipman take a wider look at whether the rapidly increasing recovery of the world economic market is a bubble itself.