Sunday, February 22, 2009

Many, many congratulations to Jonathan Jarvis, who is walking proof of the real value of the creative professions.

From Felix Salmon:

"
Multimedia Data Visualization of the Day

One of the most popular things I ever did for Portfolio.com was my "What's a CDO" interactive. A total of five different people put weeks of work into it, and it was worth it. Yet it pales in any comparison to the astounding video above, which can (and should) be seen in its full glory at crisisofcredit.com. Many, many congratulations to Jonathan Jarvis, who is walking proof of the real value of the creative professions.

Note to Tim Geithner: hire this guy now. If you want to win the war with the likes of Rick Santelli, you need to learn how to communicate directly and effectively with the public. And Jarvis is a master at that."

Me:

It's a nice video, but:
1) Low interest rates do not cause people to do anything. In order to get a better return, they turn to riskier investments.
2) Even if interest rates are low, there are lots of ways to invest your money other than the products mentioned, including just playing it safe.
From my perspective, what bubbles need to get going are a market in something that, for whatever reason, rises quickly, leaving people who are left out feeling desperate to get in it or risk falling behind. In that case, I feel that people will borrow under whatever terms that they can get. In this, bubbles are like Ponzi Schemes, since Ponzi Schemes need to generate very high returns to attract the kind of sums necessary to keep them going, and develop the feeling among people, especially rich ones I suppose, that they need to be in on this investment. No one wants to go to a party and have someone tell them that they're invested with a genius investor while they're not. This is the "I'm feeling left out" Theory of Bubbles and Ponzi Schemes. Both require the suspension of disbelief, which novelists know a lot about. Just ask us. Just don't ask us about how to make a living.

No comments: