It’s like Dawn of the Dead on Wall Street. Zombies are everywhere.

Even as stocks continue to push to new highs, the number of money-losing companies listed on US stock markets has ballooned to levels not seen since the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s.

According to a recent Wall Street Journal article, nearly 40% of US-listed companies are losing money.

According to the Wall Street Journal, 42% of money-losing companies are in the healthcare sector, “reflecting the popularity of small, often loss-making biotech stocks.” Another 17% are tech companies, “many of them fashionable new ventures.”

When you look at IPOs, the situation is equally disturbing. According to a chart provided by University of Florida finance professor Jay Ritter, the percentage of money-losing IPOs hit 81% in 2018, equalling the level in 2000 at the height of the dot-com bubble.

Last fall, we reported on the “plight of the unicorns.” These are privately held companies valued over $1 billion. Speculative money pouted into companies like Lyft, Chewie, Uber and WeWork. Their IPOs were much-anticipated by investors. They are also the poster children for easy-money induced market mania, and their IPOs were crucial for maintaining the bubble.

Markets seemed to really wake up to the plight of the unicorn when WeWork aborted its much-anticipated IPO, but the air started coming out of the unicorn bubble long before WeWork’s IPO demise.

There are some eerie similarities between the height of dot-com mania and today.

And what is the common denominator between then and now?

Easy money courtesy of the Federal Reserve.


The usual suspects inside the mainstream media were quick to demonize the law-abiding American patriots rallying in Richmond, Virginia.

The dot-com and unicorn bubbles were both made possible by Fed policy that kept interest rates artificially low and allowed companies to leverage up and operate for years without making a profit. Speculative money flowed into these companies. Stock prices mushroomed.

But bubbles burst – as the dot-com bubble did in grand fashion.

Peter Schiff called the current batch of unicorn companies weak links in the chain. The weak links break first and the rest of the chain follows.

“If investors are no longer willing to finance money-losing companies, if that type of speculative fervor has come to an end, this is a huge bell ringing on Wall Street, and it has massive implications, not only for the stock market, but for the overall economy.”

In a nutshell, these companies never bothered with making a profit. They were focused on the IPO. The strategy was to cash out on the backs of stock market investors who didn’t care whether or not the company was making money. They sacrificed profitability to deliver value to the customer in order to create a “sexy” story.

This wouldn’t be possible without the Federal Reserve artificially pushing interest rates down and injecting billions of liquidity into the markets. And it’s not just unicorns benefitting from the influx of easy money. As the WSJ article shows, established companies are also reaping a short-term windfall on Wall Street.

Tesla is the poster-child for money-losing companies with high stock valuations. As the WSJ put it, “Tesla shows a desire by investors to back disruptive companies as they build their sales.”

ZeroHedge article summed up what has happened citing Tesla as an example.

“It’s absolutely stunning how the Fed/ECB/BoJ injected upwards of $1.1 trillion into global markets in the last quarter and cut rates 80 times in the past 12 months, which allowed money-losing companies to survive another day.”

The ZeroHedge article called Telsa “the leader of this insanity, noting that it ranks as the biggest money-losing company on Wall Street. According to the report, the company’s stock value has soared 120% since the Fed launched ‘Not QE.’

“Tesla investors are convinced that fundamentals are driving the stock higher, but that might not be the case, as central bank liquidity has been pouring into anything with a CUSIP.”

Then there are companies like GE struggling to turn a profit from traditional businesses. The WSJ called it a “dash for trash” on Wall Street, with GE being a prime beneficiary.

“Not only GE, but previously unloved loss-making stocks more generally have made back some of their previous price falls.”

Again, where did all this malinvestment come from? Schiff summed it up.

“Artificially low interest rates, cheap money sloshing around causing non-economically viable businesses to exist and to thrive.”



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