There's a key difference between how investors are behaving now and during the dot-com bubble, Goldman Sachs exec says

Goldman Sachs' logoMichael M. Santiago/Getty Images AI hype has seized the stock market and been compared with the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s. Investors are acting differently this time, Goldman exec Ben Snider said in a Bloomberg podcast. They are focused on tangible, near-term earnings rather than speculative long-term potential, he said. Twenty-five years after the dot-com bubble saw internet hype grip markets — and then spectacularly unravel — AI is once again fueling market frenzy. Ho ...