Credit Crunch
December 18, 2008 by Holst Group

Edward de Bono’s Message
You may trust a person’s honesty – but can you trust that person’s intelligence? This may have some relevance to the current credit crunch or banking crisis. We can pick out at least five factors contributing to the problem and reflecting habits of thinking.
- If everyone else is doing it – it must be alright. Who wants to be left out?
- If you spread the risk among a large number of people that reduces the risk. Probably true but not if all the people fall into the same bracket (sub-prime borrowers). That is no longer a diversified risk.
- A mortgage is usually a very safe loan because there is the real value of the house that is being mortgaged. But if the mortgage is securitised and fractionated, no one knows who owns which assets.
- Once a market starts to decline in value there is an incentive to drive it further down in order to buy at a lower level in a market that is sure to recover one day.
- Bonuses and incentives for short term performance tend to ignore long term risky behaviour.
There are many more factors.



Correlated risk, regardless of how its sliced, diced or spread, is still correlated. Always has been, always will be.