trading
Explanation
The Joke
The comic is a long-form strip that walks through the history and mechanics of financial trading, starting from basic bartering and escalating through increasingly abstract and absurd layers of financial innovation. It begins with simple trade ("I'll give you this for that"), moves through currency, stock markets, and derivatives, and keeps escalating into ever more convoluted financial instruments. At each stage, a character asks reasonable questions about how the system works, and another character explains it in a way that makes it sound increasingly unhinged -- securitized debt, high-frequency trading, algorithmic market-making, and eventually instruments so abstract that nobody involved understands what they represent anymore.
The comic culminates with someone proposing that in a post-scarcity society, we would still find ways to create artificial status hierarchies and trade in them. The final panel shows someone begging, "Give me status, please," revealing that the underlying human drive behind all economic activity is not survival or comfort but social ranking.
The Humor
The humor builds through escalation. Each new panel introduces a financial concept that is slightly more divorced from physical reality than the last, and the comic's framing makes each step sound like the ravings of a lunatic -- even though every step roughly corresponds to real financial history. The joke is that the entire edifice of modern finance, when explained from first principles, sounds completely insane. The final punchline about status ties it back to evolutionary psychology, a frequent SMBC theme: no matter how sophisticated our systems become, we are still primates jockeying for position in a dominance hierarchy.
References
The comic touches on real financial concepts including commodity trading, fiat currency, stock exchanges, derivatives, securitization, and high-frequency trading. The final observation about status as the ultimate currency connects to economic theories about positional goods -- goods valued primarily because they signal social rank rather than providing intrinsic utility, as explored by economists like Robert Frank.