Saturday, June 27, 2009
The second derivative is bad
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4 comments:
My fastball won't hurt you if it hits you in the head because it has negative acceleration...
It just slowed down from 96 mph to 95.
Velocity being the 1st derivative of position (where the ball is) acceleration being the 2nd (how fast is that fastball getting faster).
Thanks John for the correct analysis of the latest Government/ Wall Street love project:
"How to Lie with Statistics"
or
"How to Fleece the American Public Without Really Trying"
Ah - but if your fast ball is slowing down then at least someday it will stop - and if it slowing down at a predictable rate we can even plausibly model it.
But when it is speeding up at an unpredicable rate then hell - who knows where we are going. If you guess you are just making it up.
--
I have done quite extensive modelling of credit losses - enough to know when I have some basis for a prediction and when I am just making it up.
Unfortunately some data points give me the willies.
J
...and when the ball hits you, you experience the 3rd derivative, aka jerk or jolt. That's the interesting one for physics.
For financial stuff, I'm a simpleton... first derivative for me.
One thing that could have an impact on default rate is that the portfolio isn't growing much. Loans typically don't default in year one, and then start to get worse. If the portfolio isn't growing, the book will have more of the older loans that are likely to have a higher default rate.
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