Happy August! If you are like me, your kids are slowly starting back to (some sort of) school, and things are a little hectic at home. My two daughters are actually going for in-person learning, but every parent we know is laying bets on when they’ll all get relegated back to Zoom U. Alas Labor Day is the current Vegas over/under. . . Let’s pick back up where we left off last month, discussing the first step towards fungible retail. Like much in life, the first step is to admit we have a problem, only this time with “credit.” Our addiction to it is partially to blame for the retail mess we’ve all gotten ourselves into, but it isn’t the only culprit. Our concepts of space and time are also part of the problem, and in this note I want to deal with time. Did you ever see the Arthur C. Clarke documentary on fractals? It came on late at night in the ‘90s. If you got home at 3am from a night of drinking, you’d turn it on and blow your mind before you passed out on the couch (not me; this happened to a guy I knew). A fractal is a mathematical model for something that is infinitely complex, meaning that a large pattern is really made up of smaller groups of identical patterns, which in turn are made up of smaller groups of identical patterns, and so on and so forth. One mathematical textbook notes that fractals can be used to describe “seemingly random or chaotic phenomena such as fluid turbulence or galaxy formation.” And, it turns out, real estate finance.
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