Template:Credibility pairs capsule: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
Amwelladmin (talk | contribs) No edit summary Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
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 inverted | 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.
- ↑ the yield curve briefly inverted in the summer of 1986 when Run DMC released their collaboration with Aerosmith, Walk This Way.