Displacement is an external shock or event that alters the economic landscape, shakes up investor expectations, and kicks off a new boom period. This concept was central to the work of economist Hyman Minsky, who studied the anatomy of financial manias. A displacement creates new, often dazzling, opportunities for profit, which can attract a flood of capital and eventually fuel a speculative Bubble. It’s the starting gun for a race that can end in euphoria and, ultimately, a crash. Whether it's a game-changing technology, a sudden war, or a dramatic shift in government policy, a displacement makes people believe that “this time is different.” It redraws the map of profitable ventures, making old industries seem obsolete and new ones seem destined for limitless growth. This powerful narrative is what displaces old economic assumptions and sets the stage for a new cycle of boom and bust.
Think of a displacement as the spark that lights the kindling of a massive bonfire. The economy might be chugging along just fine, but a displacement event provides a compelling new story that captures the imagination of investors, from seasoned professionals to the general public. This story is typically about a fundamental shift that promises to generate wealth in ways never seen before. It could be the deregulation of an industry, opening the door for new business models and aggressive competition. It could be a Technological Breakthrough, like the internet, that promises to revolutionize communication and commerce. The key is that the displacement is so profound that it makes traditional valuation metrics seem outdated. Investors start to rationalize higher and higher prices because the future looks so radically different and profitable. This change in psychology is the critical fuel that a displacement provides for the subsequent credit expansion and asset price inflation.
Displacements come in many forms, but they all share the ability to fundamentally alter economic horizons. Here are some classic examples:
A displacement is the first step in Hyman Minsky's five-stage model of a typical Financial Crisis. Understanding this sequence helps investors recognize where they are in the cycle.
For a Value Investor, a displacement is both an opportunity and a grave danger. The key is to separate the underlying reality from the speculative hype. The change brought by the displacement—the internet, for example—is often very real and creates genuine, long-term value. The danger is paying a foolish price for it during the euphoria stage. When everyone is chanting “this time is different,” the disciplined investor should be asking, “at what price?” Instead of getting swept up in the narrative, a value investor should: