The AI investment boom has worrying shades of 1840s railway mania
As in other bubbles, today’s investors are abandoning traditional measures of value
![Jensen Huang, co-founder, president and chief executive of Nvidia](/https/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/business/2024/07/31/TELEMMGLPICT000337660099_17224405848760_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqA7N2CxnJWnYI3tCbVBgu9T0aesusvN1TE7a0ddd_esI.jpeg?imwidth=350)
As in other bubbles, today’s investors are abandoning traditional measures of value
It’s too early to declare a definitive victory for small caps over market giants
Britain is currently among the most undervalued stock markets in the world
The best investments can also be the most boring – but they’re the things that make us human
The case has seldom been stronger for investors to back the developing world
It may feel like a good thing – but a strong greenback comes at a considerable cost
Key growth sectors have an insatiable appetite for the conductive metal
Investors have sweaty palms over the fortunes of some of America’s largest stocks
My seating downgrade experience underlines the distinction between good and bad companies
Back in 1999 many of the first Isa investors chose to bet on Britain’s leading shares
Markets go up and down – what matters is your nerve
After eight years of decline since Brexit, the UK is starting to look reassuringly safe again
After crunching the numbers, the age-old contrarian versus momentum debate has a winner
Tilting investors’ portfolios to domestic businesses may not be the tonic London’s stock market needs
Parallels between the dotcom hysteria of the past and today's AI revolution are uncanny
Rate cuts are largely good news for investors – but the Federal Reserve’s rationale is key