History shows that this week is best for stock-market investors

Nobel Prize-winning economist and Yale University professor Robert Shiller says that the stock market hasn't been this overvalued since the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000, and the reason is summed up in one chart.

Robert Shiller, the Nobel Prize economics laureate, told the Financial Times that fear that the U.S. stock market is overvalued is at its highest level since the 2000 dotcom bubble, meaning there is a real danger of a significant bear market. "It looks

Mainstream comedians are now tweeting about the stock market.

Nobel Prize-winning economist and Yale University professor Robert Shiller says that the stock market hasn't been this overvalued since the peak of the dot-com bubble in 2000, and the reason is summed up in one chart.

The indicator showed stocks were seriously overvalued before the market peaks of 2000 and 2007 — but it has also suggested stocks have been overpriced for the past several years, while prices have continued to rise. That prompted several attacks on