I think there is a huge pent-up demand for travel/entertainment. Unfortunately, that industry hasn't had any income for the last 10 months, so some of them are bound to go under. That'll be a chaotic market over the next 6 months or a year.
This is maybe a good launching point for my philosophy on this.
Everything you know about the travel/entertainment industry is knowledge available to everyone*. So that knowledge is pretty much already baked into whatever a particular stock is selling for.
That concept is known as “The Efficient Market Hypothesis”. It’s not perfect, but goes a long way to explaining why it’s hard to find “buys” when everyone knows what you know. Is Tesla currently overpriced? I think that’s meaningless, except in retrospect. At Monday’s opening, the number of buyers and sellers of Tesla will be evenly matched, making whatever price it’s at the “right” price. Any imbalance will cause the price to go up or down, and if not random, it’s inherently unpredictable.
Maybe I’m jaded because I remember in the 1990’s being warned that Apple stock was overpriced. In retrospect, I don’t think that was accurate. To wit:
https://www.quora.com/If-I-invested-1-000-in-Apple-stock-in-1990-how-much-would-it-be-worth-today
Once I decided that “overpriced” and “underpriced” were essentially meaningless, it really helped me to see how little stock market prognosticators actually knew and how poorly they performed - not better than chance, on average, as the hypothesis predicts.
That said, I do think that in spite of everyone having the same information, an informed investor can have intuition or insights as to how well or poorly a given company will do, and that can aid them in selecting stocks that, though fairly priced at any given moment, and equally likely to go up as down in the short term, can have growth potential others can’t see. I think that was one of the lessons I took from the aforementioned “One Up On Wall Street”.
*Barring insider knowledge, and trading on that is illegal.