Template:Apocalypse maxim: Difference between revisions

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{{quote|“[[before an apocalypse becomes an apocalypse, it doesn’t look like an apocalypse|before an apocalypse ''becomes'' an apocalypse, it doesn’t ''look'' like an apocalypse]]”.}}  
{{quote|“[[before an apocalypse becomes an apocalypse, it doesn’t look like an apocalypse|before an apocalypse ''becomes'' an apocalypse, it doesn’t ''look'' like an apocalypse]]”.}}  


The studied, logical outrage vouchsafed by those in the riskless position of having twenty-twenty hindsight and blaming the [[meatware]] ''was not available to those on deck at the time''. No-one ''knew'' or — at least until it was too late, even ''believed'' — Archegos would become Archegos. The decision calculus was nowhere near as obvious as it appears in the rear-view mirror: if it had been, ''the catastrophe would not have happened''. Archegos’ positions may have rallied.
The studied, logical outrage vouchsafed by those in the riskless position of having twenty-twenty hindsight and engaged in the fruitless, if satisfying, pursuit of blaming the [[meatware]] ''was not available to those on deck at the time''. No-one ''knew'' or — at least until it was too late, even ''believed'' — that things would turn out like this. [[Q.E.D.]]
 
Ergo, the decision calculus ''then'' was nowhere near as obvious as it appears ''now'', as an object in the rear-view mirror: if it had been, ''the [[Apocalypse|catastrophe]] would not have happened''.  


Furthermore, it is one thing to have a legal right to pull your trigger, it is quite another to resolve to use it. ''Especially'' if you don’t know how this all will play out.  
Furthermore, it is one thing to have a legal right to pull your trigger, it is quite another to resolve to use it. ''Especially'' if you don’t know how this all will play out.  


''After'' the event, things are ''obvious''. There was only ever one option.  
''After'' the event, the client is a smoking hulk; all that remains is twisted wreckage strewn across the landscape. ''Now'', it could not ''be'' more obvious: there was only ever one option.  
 
''Before'' it, there were twenty million dollars of annual revenues at stake: few individual risk managers will be prepared to blow up a key client on their own initiative, without diffusing responsibility through some kind of institutional [[Escalation circle|escalations]]. But going to a Counterparty Risk Oversight Committee takes time. And CROCs are fraught, intimidating things. To recommend affronting a [[platinum client]] is to invite a shellacking from those a long way further up the tree than you.
 
Now: if ''these'' are the options, and our valiant risk manager doesn’t yet have that twenty-twenty hindsight of what might come about tomorrow — she won’t remember, ][[Q.E.D.]] — is it any wonder she’ll be tempted to do nothing?


''Before'' it, there were twenty million dollars of annual revenues at stake: the decision to blow up a key client is not one many individuals will be prepared to make on their own. Institutional [[Escalation circle|escalations]] are time consuming, fraught, intimidating things. To recommend affronting a [[platinum client]] is to invite a shellacking from someone a long way further up the tree than you are. If these are your options, is it any wonder a risk manager will dodge the hard questions?
{{maxim|Before an apocalypse becomes an apocalypse, it doesn’t look like an apocalypse]].

Revision as of 16:12, 18 August 2021

Let us coin a maxim:

before an apocalypse becomes an apocalypse, it doesn’t look like an apocalypse”.

The studied, logical outrage vouchsafed by those in the riskless position of having twenty-twenty hindsight and engaged in the fruitless, if satisfying, pursuit of blaming the meatware was not available to those on deck at the time. No-one knew or — at least until it was too late, even believed — that things would turn out like this. Q.E.D.

Ergo, the decision calculus then was nowhere near as obvious as it appears now, as an object in the rear-view mirror: if it had been, the catastrophe would not have happened.

Furthermore, it is one thing to have a legal right to pull your trigger, it is quite another to resolve to use it. Especially if you don’t know how this all will play out.

After the event, the client is a smoking hulk; all that remains is twisted wreckage strewn across the landscape. Now, it could not be more obvious: there was only ever one option.

Before it, there were twenty million dollars of annual revenues at stake: few individual risk managers will be prepared to blow up a key client on their own initiative, without diffusing responsibility through some kind of institutional escalations. But going to a Counterparty Risk Oversight Committee takes time. And CROCs are fraught, intimidating things. To recommend affronting a platinum client is to invite a shellacking from those a long way further up the tree than you.

Now: if these are the options, and our valiant risk manager doesn’t yet have that twenty-twenty hindsight of what might come about tomorrow — she won’t remember, ]Q.E.D. — is it any wonder she’ll be tempted to do nothing?

{{maxim|Before an apocalypse becomes an apocalypse, it doesn’t look like an apocalypse]].