S01e04 Dthrip |top|: Industry
Yasmin has spent the season relying on charm and linguistic skills (she speaks seven languages) to mask her lack of quantitative instinct. In "Seder," that mask slips. Tasked with executing a complex, multi-leg derivatives trade for a prickly client named Felix, Yasmin is given a specific instruction: avoid slippage, or face the consequences. The episode’s title card could have easily been a glossary entry. In trading jargon, a D’Thrip (pronounced dee-thrip ) is an obscure piece of market slang for an error of three ticks—a small but humiliating mistake on a trade execution. It’s the kind of error that doesn’t bankrupt a bank but does bankrupt a junior trader’s reputation.
Yasmin, already shattered, tries to spin it as a “learning moment.” Eric leans in, chewing a piece of bitter herb, and delivers the episode’s thesis statement: “You think a D’Thrip is a mistake? No. A D’Thrip is a character reference. It says: ‘I don’t care enough to check my own work.’ You can teach math. You can’t teach care.” Unlike conventional dramas where a mentor might offer a private pep talk, Eric abandons Yasmin entirely. He tells her point-blank that she is no longer his problem. The Pierpoint mechanism kicks in: by the episode’s final minutes, Yasmin is pulled into a windowless HR conference room. She isn’t fired—yet. But she is put on a “performance review plan,” which in banking is the long walk off a short pier. industry s01e04 dthrip
Spoilers ahead for Industry Season 1, Episode 4. Yasmin has spent the season relying on charm
When Felix calls back to scream, he doesn’t use fancy financial terminology. He uses the street’s cruelest diminutive: “Did you just D’Thrip me?” While the trading floor burns, the episode’s centerpiece is Eric Tao’s Seder dinner. In any other show, a Passover meal would symbolize family, tradition, and redemption. In Industry , it’s a gladiator’s pit with matzah. The episode’s title card could have easily been
Yasmin’s error is textbook tragedy: rushing to impress, she misreads the bid-ask spread and executes Felix’s trade of the market mid-price. The client catches it immediately. The result is a $25,000 loss for the client—not a fortune, but a fatal stain on Yasmin’s character.
In the cutthroat arena of Pierpoint & Co., there is no room for sentimentality. Episode 4, titled "Seder," proves that thesis with surgical precision. While the episode’s name references a Jewish Passover dinner hosted by the seemingly benign Eric Tao (Ken Leung), the real action—and the episode’s enduring legacy—revolves around a single, devastating piece of trading slang: . The Setup: A House Divided The episode opens with the graduate cohort fraying at the seams. Harper Stern (Myha'la Herrold) is still reeling from her secretive FX trade in Episode 3, while Robert Spearing (Harry Lawtey) continues to drown in the social quicksand of old-money client entertainment. But the focus narrows sharply onto Yasmin Kara-Hanani (Marisa Abela) and her desperate attempt to prove her worth in the Cross-Products division.