Thursday, October 23, 2008

"unwinding of bets made on the assumption that the world economy would remain strong and market volatility would remain low even as the US slowed."

This from Brad Setser:

"In retrospect, large inflows to the emerging world - and expectations that emerging currencies were generally on an appreciating trend, making it safe to borrow in foreign currencies (or sell insurance against a large depreciation of an emerging market currency) led investors to take on a lot of risk."

I'm interested in commenting on why people do the things they do, not on economics or politics in a wonkish sort of way. I'm not interested or qualified. How can lots of money lead to poor investments? We keep hearing this:

1) Interest was so low nobody could help themselves.
2) There was so much money to invest nobody could help themselves.

Risk accelerates when things get better? The wealthier we are, the more we will risk? And isn't risk, in the end, the name for a poor investment, one that the return didn't justify the possible loss?

"The fuel for the current market fire was there. "

Can't fuel be stored? Used over time, rather than used up in a bonfire? The temperature and conditions measured and monitored.

"Faster perhaps.

That is scary."

The time to be scared is when it it's slow.

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