HACKER Q&A
📣 roschdal

When will the stock market crash?


Infinite money glitches, "artificial intelligence", massive stock buybacks, space companies, magnificent sevens, ++

See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKXgeNwNRJ4


  👤 DivingForGold Accepted Answer ✓
When momentum dries up, and not until then. Reportedly Michael Burry has recently placed massive put option bets, the question is what duration ?

6 months? A year?

Retail traders will keep throwing money at the stock market until they just don't anymore. It's not a logical thing.

and then when somebody yells "FIRE !" ... everybody rushes "to the door" and cannot get out in time.

Better to hedge your bets, if you are long in the market, with put options. Think of it as insurance.


👤 rvz
When the majority of people here believe that it never crashes.

Think when there was a bank run at SVB in 2023 and everyone here was caught with their pants down, begging to the government to rescue them.

For a market crash to happen, it has to be a contagion and spread everywhere else.


👤 goodmythical
SOON™

👤 orionblastar
When Inflation reaches a certain level and makes the US Dollar worth less than pennies. We have had hyperinflation already, and the US Dollar doesn't buy as much as it once did. I figure around 2030, when the Shit Hits the fan and the US National Debt is beyond paying off without printing up a large amount of money. We might go to the Digital Dollar before that.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Reset The WEF has The Great Reset to pay off debt from COVID-19, and it might turn nations into socialist nations with universal basic income for those who lost their jobs and can't find work due to factors like AI, etc.


👤 didgetmaster
I don't know if the term 'crash' has a formal definition (for me personally, I would define it as a 25% fall or more in less that 3 months); but I think we will experience a number of 'corrections' of about 10% within the next 5 years.

👤 imichael
According to this article [1] money available for investment can be in stocks, cash, or bonds. The market goes up when people prefer stocks, down when they prefer cash and bonds. At present, the allocation to stocks is already higher than it has ever been, since 1950. Chart from FRED [2]. So if this theory is correct trouble is not far off.

[1] https://www.philosophicaleconomics.com/2013/12/the-single-gr...

[2] https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1Wc2g

My own theory is that at present inflation makes bonds unattractive. At some point a recession will kill inflation (and profits) and make bonds look better relative to stocks.


👤 segmondy
Sep 24th 2026. 10:07am EST