Recent Blog Posts
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The Times' Rorshach Geithner Story
Apr 27 20099:26 am EDT -
Sinking Animal Spirits
Apr 27 20098:45 am EDT -
Counter-cyclical Urban Policy
Apr 26 200910:00 am EDT -
Be Your Own Counterfeiter
Apr 26 20099:36 am EDT -
Being Tim Geithner
Apr 25 200912:37 pm EDT -
Notes From a Press Conference Naif
Apr 25 20099:41 am EDT -
What Good is the News?
Apr 25 20098:32 am EDT -
Stressful Enough
Apr 24 20092:29 pm EDT -
Not Regretting the Pound
Apr 24 20091:09 pm EDT -
Introducing the New Ford Squeeze
Apr 24 20099:47 am EDT
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The Great Greg Newton
In the wake of the global financial and economic meltdown, I wrote a big article for Wired magazine about how it was largely enabled by something called the Gaussian Copula Function. But the whole article was written, naturally, with hindsight. Who saw it coming? Greg Newton, for one, who blogged the Gaussian copula back in September 2005, and concluded:
Fast-growing, leveraged, interest-rate sensitive and largely untested derivatives have been conspicuously present at the center of numerous potentially-systemic train wrecks. Tick, tick, tick…
Greg Newton was also the publisher of the famous MAR/Hedge report on Bernie Madoff in 2001 — another case of being presciently early to a huge story. And his blog, Naked Shorts, was one of the very first must-read econoblogs, bringing perspicacity and great good humor to the normally-bone-dry world of finance.
Tragically, Greg died on April 1, just as he was about to start a new life in Florida; the closest thing to a memorial board is this blog entry at Seeking Alpha, where Greg was a contributor.
As Paul Murphy says, Greg single-handedly disproved the notion that bloggers couldn’t be aggressive reporters. He was an irreplaceable role model to us all; the econoblogosphere has lost a true pioneer.
Reprinted from ReutersComments
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