Decoupled Decoupling, Global Contagion, and Normal Accidents

The boots have been put to the decoupling hypothesis, with Europe now in full we’ve-got-bailouts-too panic, and Asian only slightly behind. People forget, but European banks are, on average, materially more levered than their U.S. counterparts, and, as a result, it doesn’t take much to tip them over the liquidity edge.

It is a classic normal accident, in Charles Perrow’s terms, with a confluence of actually fairly obvious foibles conspiring together to create an altogether predictable problem, but one that cannot be straightforwardly stopped. To turn to wildfire ecology, my favorite reference discipline during market crises, some of the largest fires just have to burn themselves out.

Related posts:

  1. JetBlue, Blogging, and Normal Accidents
  2. Deflating the U.S. Decoupling Hypothesis: Fun With Selective Data
  3. linkfest – 02/05/08: Icahn, Contagion, DCA, New Drugs, etc.
  4. Catching Up: The Decoupling Myth, Subprime in Context, etc.
  5. Cynical Bubbles, Missed Market Inflections, Decoupling, etc.