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Even now, with retail being the most powerful they've ever been in human history, they might be able to squeeze a single, small or mid cap equity (GME being the most famous example) but they cannot move sectors of markets, much less create a generalized bubble in ANY asset class.
Crypto 2017 is the only "bubble" which you might claim was retail-driven (even then, you'd need to provide evidence for such a claim), and even that had institutional money such as Grayscale, high-net-worth speculators, and algotrading from high-net-worth speculators driving the bubble. Not to mention that was a tiny bubble relative to any equity market bubbles.
It's well-known Tech bubble 2001 was driven by investment banks. It's even more well known that the 2008 bubble was driven by investment banks, hedge funds, and derivatives trading. The current $2.5T+ market cap crypto bubble has been formed by large institutional buyers, high net worth individuals, and corporations pumping money.
Dutch Tulips, South Sea Trading Company stocks, 90s Japan were all from institutions or high-net-worth individuals (nobles, royalty, corporations, etc) as well. Your post really couldn't be further away from reality. The historic bond bubbles have all been inflated by institutions and governments. Making a claim that even one bubble, much less "most" bubbles are caused by retail, is an outrageous claim which requires extraordinary evidence that you would need to provide.
You're embarrassing yourself at this point between the barber and stating housing was "clear cut retail debt" in 2007 when it was actually a trillion dollar derivatives market that caused the bubble/crash, significantly driven by predatory/abusive from the mortgage lending side? Where do you think retail got all the money for the houses? "the entire crypto _thing_ is retail" uh, no, it's not. Tesla bought over a billion in bitcoin earlier this year, and large investment banks opened crypto desks early this year. And bringing up companies like Blackrock(?) which I didn't mention, oh my you are all over the place. Grayscale is not Blackrock... Can you present any evidence at all that retail has caused historical asset bubbles?
Sorry, you're just straight making things up and have a very poor or nonexistent understanding of markets. I won't waste my time here any longer.