Second-loss: Difference between revisions
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{{a|negotiation|}}The guy that gets whacked only ''after'' the [[first-loss|first loss]] guy has had all the beating he can take. This can be a source of some comfort, if not empathy, for that [[second-loss|second loss]] person, but this comfort will last only until she realises what was in the portfolio. This | {{a|negotiation|}}The guy that gets whacked only ''after'' the [[first-loss|first loss]] guy has had all the beating he can take. This can be a source of some comfort, if not empathy, for that [[second-loss|second loss]] person, but this comfort will last only until she realises what was in the portfolio. | ||
This “reveal” will at once, explain how the yield on her second-loss tranche was so damn ''good'', seeming as it so thoroughly did to defy the normal expectations of risk and return, and will also make plain how utterly her [[second-loss]] tranche is about to be demolished by the same tsunami that she has just smugly watched overwhelming the flood defences of that poor [[first-loss]] guy, who, as he floats off into the tidal spume among the splinters, match-sticks and whatever else remains of the wreckage of his notes, will be looking back up the beach towards the forthcoming destruction with a sense of inner calm and satisfaction. | |||
Karma, they call it. |
Revision as of 10:56, 22 October 2020
Negotiation Anatomy™
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The guy that gets whacked only after the first loss guy has had all the beating he can take. This can be a source of some comfort, if not empathy, for that second loss person, but this comfort will last only until she realises what was in the portfolio.
This “reveal” will at once, explain how the yield on her second-loss tranche was so damn good, seeming as it so thoroughly did to defy the normal expectations of risk and return, and will also make plain how utterly her second-loss tranche is about to be demolished by the same tsunami that she has just smugly watched overwhelming the flood defences of that poor first-loss guy, who, as he floats off into the tidal spume among the splinters, match-sticks and whatever else remains of the wreckage of his notes, will be looking back up the beach towards the forthcoming destruction with a sense of inner calm and satisfaction.
Karma, they call it.