Template:M intro banking Minsky moment
Hyman Minsky’s “Minsky moment” comes at the end of a credit cycle which he sees as having five stages:
- Displacement: invention, war, change in economic policy:
- Boom: the invisible hand seeks and and exploits whatever opportunities are thrown up by the displacement (even bad displacements create opportunities: wars benefit the arms industry and the medical dressings industry)
- Euphoria: everything seems amazing, the world is picked out in vivid, sparkling light, awash with profit possibilities, and lending standards start to slide.
- Profit-taking: Smart people call the top of the market and sell
- Panic: Usually triggered by something dramatic or symbolic: the sudden failure of a hedge fund, or some such, everyone stampedes for the exits.
This still feels a little bit “survivor bias-y” — a story we construct in hindsight and select evidence for it in hindsight.
Cycles, like waves, are not discrete, but operate on a bigger, wider ocean with all kinds of cross-currents and perturbations making the market behave in unpredictable ways.