Neszed-Mobile-header-logo
Wednesday, October 8, 2025
Newszed-Header-Logo
HomeUSA NewsHedge fund billionaire says 2025 is ‘so much more potentially explosive than...

Hedge fund billionaire says 2025 is ‘so much more potentially explosive than 1999’ because of the way bull markets always end

Hedge fund billionaire Paul Tudor Jones, founder and CIO of Tudor Investment Corporation, has raised alarms about the state of financial markets in 2025, drawing pointed comparisons to the explosive tech-driven boom of 1999, while clarifying that today’s environment could be “so much more potentially explosive.” The reason why has to do with what the market veteran knows about how bull markets always play out.

Speaking to Andrew Ross Sorkin of the New York Times’ DealBook on CNBC’s Squawk Box ahead of the upcoming Robin Hood Foundation investor conference, Jones described today’s investment climate as uncannily similar to the one that preceded the 2000 dotcom bust.

“It feels exactly like 1999,” he said, implying that the market was acting like the famous Prince song with the lyrics, “Party like it’s 1999.” He urged investors to position themselves like it’s October 1999, when the Nasdaq doubled in a matter of months before collapsing, a pattern Jones sees as increasingly plausible today. The difference is that this could be even worse than the dotcom bust, he said.

Jones told Sorkin his concerns had to do with investor behavior in every bull market, specifically at the end, when the cliff is nearing and nobody is sure where it is.

Jones underscored that in every bull market, the “greatest price appreciation is always the 12 months preceding the top,” like what happened after October 1999. For investors, he said, the challenge is timing: “If you don’t play it, you’re missing out on the juice. If you do play it, you…have to have really happy feet because there will be a really, really bad end to it,” he said, seeming to refer to the American football phrase for when a quarterback is antsy and tiptoeing around the pocket, rather than standing their ground.

“If anything, now is so much more potentially explosive than 1999,” Jones argued, citing the backdrop of the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates. He noted the Fed is set up for several rate cuts, with monetary policy taking the economy to a real interest rate of zero, meaning incentives to invest and spend given such a low cost of capital. In terms of fiscal policy, the Congress had a budget surplus in 1999 and today it has a 6% budget deficit. “That fiscal/monetary combination is a brew that we haven’t seen since, I guess, the postwar period, early ’50s, something like that,” he said. “And that was crazy times, right? Coming out of the war.”

Still, Jones insisted he wasn’t calling a bubble or predicting a crash.

Source link

RELATED ARTICLES

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Most Popular

Recent Comments