With stocks hovering around all-time highs, many are wondering if this asset class is the next great bubble ready to burst.
But stocks aren't the only things that look frothy. There seems to be a lot of other asset classes that sure look like bubbles.
We've compiled the assets analysts now believe are flashing warning signs of over-inflating.
If you think we reached peak bubble-calls last spring when Robert Shiller diagnosed a "bubble on bubbles," think again.
Textbooks
Warning stat: The price of college textbooks is up over 800 percent since 1978.
What the experts say: "The cost of college textbooks has been rising at almost twice the rate of general CPI inflation for at least the last 30 years," according to Mark J. Perry, American Enterprise Institute."As Glenn Reynolds reminds us, 'a process that cannot go on forever, won’t,' and the college textbook bubble is certainly one of those processes."
Chinese Housing
Warning stat: First tier cities Beijing and Guangzhou saw home prices rise 3.1 percent in February, the biggest jumps in the country. Meanwhile, entire towns will go up in China with no inhabitants. These are China's notorious "ghost cities."
What the experts say: “There are obvious bubbles in the property market, and it is possible it will get out of control and crack,” according to Wang Shi, chairman of China's largest developer.
Bitcoin
Warning stat: The "crypto currency" now trades at $63 — double what it was at the beginning of March.
What the experts say: "In hindsight, the people who bid the price of Bitcoins up to $30 in 2011 may not have been so crazy after all. It just took the broader market, including me, a couple of years to catch up with them," according to Ars Technica's Timothy B. Lee.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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