Template:Credibility pairs capsule: Difference between revisions

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In an orderly and functioning market, “[[credibility pairs]]are naturally negatively taste-correlated artists, and such serve as a useful means for benchmarking internal plausibility curves to market. Notable exchange-traded credibility pairs include ''[[Keith Jarrett]] and [[Rick Astley]]'' (ticker: KJA:RAS); ''Billy Ray Cyrus and Radiohead'' (ticker: BRH:RHD), ''[[Toto]] and Grandmaster Flash'' (ticker: TOT:GMF) and, notoriously, Gary Glitter and Rolf Harris (ticker:GGL:ROL) — a long and apparently stable negative correlation which caused widespread dislocation when it inverted unexpectedly in 2014.
In an orderly and functioning market, “[[credibility pair]]s” are naturally negative preference-correlations, and such serve as a useful means for benchmarking internal plausibility curves to market. Notable exchange-traded credibility pairs include ''[[Keith Jarrett]] and [[Rick Astley]]'' (ticker: KJA:RAS); ''Billy Ray Cyrus and Radiohead'' (ticker: BRH:RHD), ''[[Toto]] and Grandmaster Flash'' (ticker: TOT:GMF)<ref>the yield curve
briefly inverted in the summer of 1986 when Run DMC released their collaboration with Aerosmith, ''Walk This Way''.</ref> and, notoriously, ''Gary Glitter and Rolf Harris'' (ticker:GGL:ROL) — the last a long and apparently stable negative [[correlation]] which when it inverted unexpectedly in 2014 caused widespread poise dislocation.

Latest revision as of 14:19, 4 April 2020

In an orderly and functioning market, “credibility pairs” are naturally negative preference-correlations, and such serve as a useful means for benchmarking internal plausibility curves to market. Notable exchange-traded credibility pairs include Keith Jarrett and Rick Astley (ticker: KJA:RAS); Billy Ray Cyrus and Radiohead (ticker: BRH:RHD), Toto and Grandmaster Flash (ticker: TOT:GMF)[1] and, notoriously, Gary Glitter and Rolf Harris (ticker:GGL:ROL) — the last a long and apparently stable negative correlation which when it inverted unexpectedly in 2014 caused widespread poise dislocation.

  1. the yield curve briefly inverted in the summer of 1986 when Run DMC released their collaboration with Aerosmith, Walk This Way.