Category Archives: John

nntaleb: Why did the CRISIS Happen? http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1666042

nntaleb: Why did the CRISIS Happen?
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1666042

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Abstract:
This paper —while a standalone invited essay written for a special crisis issue of New Political Economy — synthesizes the various technical documents by the author as related to the financial crisis. It can also be used as a technical companion to The Black Swan(2007-2010).

Keywords: Black Swan, Risk Management, Finance, Markets, Crisis

The Markets, Economic Data, and My Black Swan Approach – Scala Volpe Capital

At this point I think it would be helpful to illuminate what I’ve been doing both in reaction to the economic data and to be proactive to what I think is still to come.As you may have read already on my Portfolio page, I do employ black swan protection protocols rather consistently month to month.What this means is, each month I purchase the following months’ put options on the SPY (the underlying investment symbol for the S&P500 stock index).These put options, which reflect a bearish outlook on the underlying investment, are bought “out of the money,” meaning the anticipated price (or strike price) that I’m purchasing is below the actual price of SPY as it stands today.So for example, SPY closed around 107 today, and my September puts have a strike price of 100.If the SPY were to make a sharp move downward below 100 before September 18 (the day my options expire), I would profit handsomely.If the puts expire out of the money I’ll lose my entire initial investment sum.

How Would You Simplify the Financial-Reform Bill? A Freakonomics Quorum – Freakonomics Blog – NYTimes.com

HatTip to Dave Lull

Nassim Nicholas Taleb is the author of The Black Swan. He is at work on a paper called “Why Did the Crisis of 2008 Happen?” (Links to NNT pdf)

“The captain goes down with the ship…”

Time to realize that capitalism is not about free options. The captain goes down with the ship — all captains and all ships — making everyone involved in risk-bearing accountable, no exception, none. Morally, legally, whatever can be done. That includes the Nobel (Bank of Sweden), the academic establishment, the rating agencies, forecasters, bank managers, etc.

Thoughts on Inflation Protection and Other Hedging Approaches – Scala Volpe Capital

It’s true Nassim Taleb (author of “The Black Swan”) recommends a “barbell” approach for most investors when allocating their capital. What this equates to is putting 80-90% of your funds into very conservative instruments, such as cash, and the other 10-20% into very high risk instruments like options, where payoffs are significant if your options come into the money. This way, you’re insulated against catastrophic loss but positioned to strike it big if your options hit. (Options have the potential for cubic payoffs, a concept I’ll examine in greater detail in future posts.)

But the commenter brings up a good point – what about inflation?