Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Bubble Definitions and Some Pictures Fin254f: Spring 2010 Kindleberger/Aliber 2-3(skim)
2
Outline Pictures/examples Minsky taxonomy Speculation
3
U.S. Stocks
4
U.S. Stock (inflation adjusted)
5
S&P Price/Dividend Ratio
6
US House Prices
7
U.S. House Prices (long)
8
Crash of 1929: U.S.
9
Crash of 1987: U.S.
10
Japan
11
Dot Com Bubble
12
Dot Com Again
13
The Big Ten Bubbles <2008 Tulips (Holland 1636) South Sea Bubble (UK, 1720) Mississippi Bubble1720 1920's stocks Developing country lending (1970's) Japan 1980's (stocks and real estate) Asia (Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia others, 1990's) Mexico, early 1990's Internet (late 90's)
14
Minsky Model Overview Not periodic (many early models are) Kuznets (housing), Kondratief (50 years) Changes in credit (pro cyclical) Changes in beliefs (optimism, risk) Starts with displacement (causes/optimism)
15
Displacement Examples US 1920's: Electricity/mass production Japan 1980's: Financial liberalization/FX appreciation Asia 1980's: Implosion of Japan bubble/growth miracles U.S. 90's: Internet U.S. 2008: ???
16
Minsky and Credit Bank credit unstable Related to bubble growth Financial regulatory changes
17
Minsky Taxonomy Hedge finance Speculative finance Ponzi finance
18
Hedge Finance Income > Interest + some debt Common in bad times, and early stages of bubbles
19
Speculative Finance Income pays off interest Income can't pay off old debts Firms must refinance Middle stage of bubble
20
Ponzi Finance Charles Ponzi : Boston, 1920's Offers 30 percent interest/month Finances with new depositors In month 4: Cash < interest payments Ponzi goes to prison
21
Ponzi Finance Income < interest New debt needed just to make interest payments Unstable top of bubble
22
Bubbles and Growth Dividend Discount Model
23
Growth, Bubbles, Mania and Irrationality Mania = Irrationality Bubble trickier definition Run up in price Deviation from fundamental P/D, P/rental, P/earnings, deviation from PPP 14 - 40 months Beliefs and growth: When are they irrational?
24
Bubbles in Return and Risk Return: Optimistic return and growth forecasts Internet bubbles Risk still considered Risk: Optimistic beliefs on risk Reasonable (not stellar) returns Low risk Securitized debt
25
Difference When Bursts Return: Expectations proved wrong, but new values might still fall in tail of belief distribution Risk Events show entire belief system is completely wrong Investors have no valid probabilities
26
Propagation Not part of Minsky model Mechanisms Arbitrage (example: gold) Trade demands Capital flows Psychological connections Crash of 87 Asian crisis and Argentina Bankruptcies and bank failures Counterparty risk
27
Lender of Last Resort Final lender to stop propagation mechanisms National level: Central banks International level: IMF??
28
Criticisms of Minsky Framework Each bubble is unique No longer relevant Markets are efficient
29
Uniqueness "This time is different" Specific factors Are there common patterns?
30
No Longer Relevant Regulation keeps "ruling out" bubbles Seems pretty false right now "Great moderation" Central banking of the 90's Periods of relative stasis
31
Markets are Efficient Prices contain all information Bubbles only appear to be bubbles ex- post Need more information or More complete models
32
Speculation Stages First stage Investors buy into limited but reasonable asset Want to hold asset Drive price up Second stage Speculators enter Interested only in quick resale
33
How to Differentiate? Real estate: Owner occupancy Stocks Difficult Problematic policy question Stop "speculative buying"
34
Rationality Difficult to define without theory of how the world works Rational relative to something
35
Rationality and Markets Does "individual rationality" -> "group rationality"? Not clear Buy into a bubble Do markets "aggregate information"? Not clear Truth plus noise No price -> trader feedback
36
Speculation and Stability Does speculation destabilize markets? How can we tell when we see it? "Eliminate destabilizing speculators"
37
Stability and Mechanisms No general market stability theorems in Economics and Finance Cobweb models Supply responds to last period demand Can generate price cycles Expectations can make things worse
38
Cobweb Model D S P Q
39
National Differences? Speculation patterns??? Sheep grazing -> gambling and speculation ?? U.S. open society and wide open business climate -> speculation?? This evidence is sketchy at best Few countries/regions safe from bubbles
40
Outline Pictures/examples Minsky taxonomy Speculation
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.