This thesis is composed of three independent articles. The first two chapters are on the topic of asset bubbles. In the first chapter, I study the interactions between rational asset bubbles and product market competition. I build a theoretical model where I show that asset bubbles, by providing a production or entry subsidy, may have a pro-competitive effect and force firms to expand and cut profit margins. I use the model to interpret the evidence of two famous bubble episodes: the British railway mania of the 1840s and the dotcom bubble of the 1990s. In the second chapter, I provide a comprehensive characterization of non-fundamental stock price fluctuations at the industry level. Among other things, I show that overvaluation shocks tend...