Riding Out a "K5" Bubble
Let's see . . . earthquakes have the Richter Scale, and tornadoes have the Fujita Scale, but what do financial bubbles have?
How about the "Kaplan Scale?"
I'm not a fan of logarithmic numbers, so I'll stick with the Fujita Scale's F1 - F5 ranking system (of course, substituting "K" for "F").
Herewith is a quick description of each level's size, intensity, and duration, with illustrative examples:
K1: Limited to a single commodity, market sector, or (smaller) national economy. Damage: under $100 billion. Examples: crude oil bubble -- 2007-2008 (peaked at $150 a barrel); Iceland's economy -- 2003-2008.
K2: Damage between $100 and $500 billion. Limited to one major economy, or several emerging ones. Example: the S&L Crisis and related commercial real estate bubble in the U.S. -- late 1980's.
K3: Regional in scope, damage between $500 billion and $1 trillion. Example: the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis, which began in Thailand and quickly spread to Indonesia. South Korea, and Hong Kong.
K4: Damage exceeds $1 trillion, spanning multiple markets globally; multi-year duration. Fallout capable of putting multiple, developed economies into recession -- or a single, major economy into Depression.
Examples: the late '90's tech stock bubble; Japanese stock and real estate bubble -- 1980's.
K5: Damage exceeds $5 trillion. Build-up and subsequent unwinding can span decades.
Capable of throwing many if not most global economies into recession -- and some into depression. Example: The Great Depression.
So where does the Crash of '08 rate?
So far, I'd put it between K4 and K5.
Showing posts with label Richter Scale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richter Scale. Show all posts
Monday, December 14, 2009
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