Akademik

black swan
n.
An extremely rare and unexpected event that has significant consequences.
black-swan adj.
Example Citations:
Black swans are, of course, those highly improbable but painfully consequential events that strike from the blue — or from the streets of Cairo, or from an offshore oil rig, or from a poorly designed car part. They can destroy a company's reputation, cripple its financial performance, and perhaps even kill it outright. Because they are rare and almost impossible to predict, black-swan events tend to fall outside the scope of most companies' risk-management programs (assuming a company has such a program at all).
—Russ Banham, " Disaster Averted?: http://cfosreact.com/article.cfm/14564959/c_14567388?f=TodayInFinance_Inside," CFO Magazine, April 1, 2011
Like the risk models that failed then, the standard deviation in a Sharpe ratio would use historic data on volatility and assume a normal distribution for market moves. So-called black swan events (rare and unexpected), like America's first ever steep decline in house prices, can and will occur.
—Rob Cox and Antony Currie, " Treating Traders Like Hedge Funds: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/13/business/13views.html?src=busln," The New York Times, May 12, 2011
Earliest Citation:
Solon also had the intuition of a problem that has obsessed science for the past three centuries. It is called the problem of induction. I call it in this book the black swan or the rare event.
—Nassim Nicholas Taleb, Fooled By Randomness: https://www.randomhouse.com/book/176225/fooled-by-randomness-by-nassim-nicholas-taleb/9781400067930/?view=print, W. W. Norton, October 1, 2001
Notes:
I should mention that there's another sense of the phrase black swan that refers to something extremely rare, and that sense is several hundred years old.
Related Words:
apocalypse fatigue
dread merchant
event horizon
success disaster
tipping element
tipping point
Categories:
Buzzwords
Stock Market and Investing
Of course, if you live in New Zealand or Australia black swans aren't rare at all; white ones are.I don't think the old sense is really a different sense of 'black swan' - when people started using 'black swan' in the sense you mention above, I definitely did not perceive it as a shift in meaning - and I was using 'black swan' to refer to such events well before 2001.
The sense of 'black swan' referring to events being unpredictable (as opposed, perhaps, to rare objects) goes back to the literature on the problem of induction from at least the early 20th century.I don't think the old sense is really a different sense of 'black swan' - when people started using 'black swan' in the sense you mention above, I definitely did not perceive it as a shift in meaning - and I was using 'black swan' to refer to such events well before 2001.
The sense of 'black swan' referring to events being unpredictable (as opposed, perhaps, to rare objects) goes back to the literature on the problem of induction from at least the early 20th century.

New words. 2013.