Oh this is priceless, "I wanna bubble! I wanna bubble! Waaaaaah!"<p>TL;DR version : Companies go public later, non-qualified investors don't get a chance to invest during their growth phase, so 'regular' folks are missing out on that wealth creation.<p>All of that is true, and 'regular folks' are also missing out on the wealth destruction. The author uses FaceBook as their stalking horse, they point out that people who invested when Facebook was only valued at 550M have done really well, and people who bought at the IPO price or since, haven't. But here is the rub. Is Facebook a good investment or not?<p>If you have any sort of maturity as an investor at all you realize that more money is made by the real growth post IPO than is made leading up to the IPO. That is because it occurs over a longer time and starts from a bigger base. If you had invested in LinkedIn at their IPO (they have a credible business model, and traction) even after the 'pop' you would have paid between $90 and $95 a share. That same stock today is worth $108. That is a 13% gain in a bit over a year. Pretty good in an otherwise stumpy economy. If you bought Stratsys (NASDAQ:SSYS) last year like I did because I thought "gee, I think 3D printing is going to be a huge growth industry." You could be up 200% (I bought it around $25 and its up over $60 now.)<p>The bottom line is that nothing 'bad' has happened to 'investing' but we appear to have successfully avoided re-creating the dot-com bubble craziness of the last century.<p>But the author, perhaps reading glamorous stories of people who talked about how many 'Porsche units' of money they earned on their over valued stocks that day, has come to realize its not going to be like that. Ideally not ever, but at least until the old farts die who remember how crazy it was. Going middle-class => multi-millionaire => middle-class does something to a person. Maybe it turns their cynicism dial up to 11, I can't say for sure. But there is no sense complaining about not having a bubble happen.