I decided to play around with Google Trends just now to see what value search volume has in helping us figure out what's going on.
Below are searches with peaks of interest
First, a disclaimer - I had originally linked to the direct images generated by the searches. As I previewed the post, some had disappeared. I replaced them and checked again, but to my chagrin, more had vanished. Faced with a prospect of broken links (no good for you guys), I saved, uploaded, and relinked all the charts. The preview is currently showing the charts x2; not sure why.
Housing bubble
The real estate bubble chart looks similar:
Gold bubble doesn't even register before the end of 2007. Note that the peak matches the most recent high in early December.
Then again, deflation fears were paramount in late 2008; this didn't materialize (as itulip has maintained all along):
I was surprised to see that inflation searches haven't spiked. The news volume was highest in mid-2008 amidst the oil spike
Still not much attention to peak oil:
Unemployment searches double starting in late 2008:
Practically no searches for "China bubble" until mid-2009:
Dubai bubble seems to be a one-time spike:
Greece debt looks similar to Dubai:
PIIGS
*Yawn* subprime is so 2007/2008
Interest in gold bullion peaked amidst the onset of the fall 2008 crash
Silver bullion was similar except for an early 2006 spike (due to SLV launch?)
Looks like some people were interested in buying amidst the blood in the street. Chart is for "buy stocks"
Then again, more were looking to "sell stocks" (7.5x the baseline vs 4x baseline of "buy stocks")
The searches for recession peak right around EJ's call
"us default" becomes a meme from mid-2008 onwards
"dollar crash" shows up a little earlier, though:
"currency crisis" emerges around this time as well:
Hyperinflation chart:
Like subprime, bank failure is no big deal now
Short stocks explodes in early Sept 09. A profitable course if taken.
"aaa rating" results:
If EJ is right in his 10/29/09 post, expect another spike in stimulus searches second quarter 2010.
What's interesting is how many of these searches coincided with tops. Wisdom of the crowd at work?
Please add any interesting charts you find!
I'm going to make another thread about this in Rant & Rave for other searches.
Below are searches with peaks of interest
First, a disclaimer - I had originally linked to the direct images generated by the searches. As I previewed the post, some had disappeared. I replaced them and checked again, but to my chagrin, more had vanished. Faced with a prospect of broken links (no good for you guys), I saved, uploaded, and relinked all the charts. The preview is currently showing the charts x2; not sure why.
Housing bubble
The real estate bubble chart looks similar:
Gold bubble doesn't even register before the end of 2007. Note that the peak matches the most recent high in early December.
Then again, deflation fears were paramount in late 2008; this didn't materialize (as itulip has maintained all along):
I was surprised to see that inflation searches haven't spiked. The news volume was highest in mid-2008 amidst the oil spike
Still not much attention to peak oil:
Unemployment searches double starting in late 2008:
Practically no searches for "China bubble" until mid-2009:
Dubai bubble seems to be a one-time spike:
Greece debt looks similar to Dubai:
PIIGS
*Yawn* subprime is so 2007/2008
Interest in gold bullion peaked amidst the onset of the fall 2008 crash
Silver bullion was similar except for an early 2006 spike (due to SLV launch?)
Looks like some people were interested in buying amidst the blood in the street. Chart is for "buy stocks"
Then again, more were looking to "sell stocks" (7.5x the baseline vs 4x baseline of "buy stocks")
The searches for recession peak right around EJ's call
"us default" becomes a meme from mid-2008 onwards
"dollar crash" shows up a little earlier, though:
"currency crisis" emerges around this time as well:
Hyperinflation chart:
Like subprime, bank failure is no big deal now
Short stocks explodes in early Sept 09. A profitable course if taken.
"aaa rating" results:
If EJ is right in his 10/29/09 post, expect another spike in stimulus searches second quarter 2010.
What's interesting is how many of these searches coincided with tops. Wisdom of the crowd at work?
Please add any interesting charts you find!
I'm going to make another thread about this in Rant & Rave for other searches.
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