Wall Street crash of 1929
The Wall Street Crash of 1929, also known as the Great Crash and the Stock Market Crash of 1929, began in late October 1929 and was the most devastating stock market crash in the history of the United States when taking into consideration the full extent and duration of its fallout.[1] The crash signaled the beginning of the 10-year Great Depression that affected all Western industrialized countries[2] and did not end in the United States until the onset of American mobilization for World War II at the end of 1941.
Anyone who bought stocks in mid-1929 and held onto them saw most of his or her adult life pass by before getting back to even.
Timeline
The Roaring Twenties, the decade that led up to the Crash,[4] was a time of wealth and excess. Despite the dangers of speculation, many believed that the stock market would continue to rise indefinitely. The market had been on a six-year run that saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average increase in value fivefold, peaking at 381.17 on September 3, 1929.[5] Shortly before the crash, economist Irving Fisher famously proclaimed, "Stock prices have reached what looks like a permanently high plateau."[6] The optimism and financial gains of the great bull market were shaken on "Black Thursday", October 24, 1929, when share prices on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) abruptly fell.
In the days leading up to the crash, the market was severely unstable. Periods of selling and high volumes of trading were interspersed with brief periods of rising prices and recovery. Economist and author Jude Wanniski later correlated these swings with the prospects for passage of the Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act, which was then being debated in Congress.[7]
On October 24 ("Black Thursday"), the market lost 11% of its value at the opening bell on very heavy trading. Several leading Wall Street bankers met to find a solution to the panic and chaos on the trading floor.[8] The meeting included Thomas W. Lamont, acting head of Morgan Bank; Albert Wiggin, head of the Chase National Bank; and Charles E. Mitchell, president of the National City Bank of New York. They chose Richard Whitney, vice president of the Exchange, to act on their behalf.
With the bankers' financial resources behind him, Whitney placed a bid to purchase a large block of shares in U.S. Steel at a price well above the current market. As traders watched, Whitney then placed similar bids on other "blue chip" stocks. This tactic was similar to one that ended the Panic of 1907. It succeeded in halting the slide. The Dow Jones Industrial Average recovered, closing with it down only 6.38 points for the day; however, unlike 1907, the respite was only temporary.
Over the weekend, the events were covered by the newspapers across the United States. On October 28, "Black Monday",[9] more investors decided to get out of the market, and the slide continued with a record loss in the Dow for the day of 38.33 points, or 13%.
The next day, "Black Tuesday", October 29, 1929, about 16 million shares were traded, and the Dow lost an additional 30 points, or 12%,[10][11][12] amid rumors that U.S. President Herbert Hoover would not veto the pending Smoot–Hawley Tariff Act.[3] The volume of stocks traded on October 29, 1929 was a record that was not broken for nearly 40 years.[11]
On October 29, William C. Durant joined with members of the Rockefeller family and other financial giants to buy large quantities of stocks in order to demonstrate to the public their confidence in the market, but their efforts failed to stop the large decline in prices. Due to the massive volume of stocks traded that day, the ticker did not stop running until about 7:45 p.m. that evening. The market had lost over $30 billion in the space of two days which included $14 billion on October 29 alone.[13]
Dow Jones Industrial Average on Black Monday and Black Tuesday[14]Date | Change | % Change | Close |
---|---|---|---|
October 28, 1929 | −38.33 | −12.82 | 260.64 |
October 29, 1929 | −30.57 | −11.73 | 230.07 |
After a one-day recovery on October 30, where the Dow regained an additional 28.40 points, or 12%, to close at 258.47, the market continued to fall, arriving at an interim bottom on November 13, 1929, with the Dow closing at 198.60. The market then recovered for several months, starting on November 14, with the Dow gaining 18.59 points to close at 217.28, and reaching a secondary closing peak (i.e., bear market rally) of 294.07 on April 17, 1930. Then, the Smoot-Hawley Tariff was enacted that June, and the Dow dropped again, stabilizing above 200. The following year, Dow embarked on another, much longer, steady slide from April 1931 to July 8, 1932 when it closed at 41.22—its lowest level of the 20th century, concluding an 89% loss rate for all of the market's stocks. For most of the 1930s, the Dow began to slowly regain the ground it lost during the 1929 crash and the three years following it, but it would not return to the peak closing of September 3, 1929 until November 23, 1954.[15][16]
Economic fundamentals
The crash followed a speculative boom that had taken hold in the late 1920s, which had led hundreds of thousands of Americans to invest heavily in the stock market. A significant number of them were borrowing money to buy more stocks. By August 1929, brokers were routinely lending small investors more than two-thirds of the face value of the stocks they were buying. Over $8.5 billion was out on loan,[17] more than the entire amount of currency circulating in the U.S. at the time.[13][18]
The rising share prices encouraged more people to invest; people hoped the share prices would rise further. Speculation thus fueled further rises and created an economic bubble. Because of margin buying, investors stood to lose large sums of money if the market turned down—or even failed to advance quickly enough. The average P/E (price to earnings) ratio of S&P Composite stocks was 32.6 in September 1929,[19] clearly above historical norms. On October 24, 1929, with the Dow just past its September 3 peak of 381.17, the market finally turned down, and panic selling started.
Subsequent actions
In 1932, the Pecora Commission was established by the U.S. Senate to study the causes of the crash. The following year, the U.S. Congress passed the Glass–Steagall Act mandating a separation between commercial banks, which take deposits and extend loans, and investment banks, which underwrite, issue, and distribute stocks, bonds, and other securities.
After the experience of the 1929 crash, stock markets around the world instituted measures to suspend trading in the event of rapid declines, claiming that the measures would prevent such panic sales. However, the one-day crash of Black Monday, October 19, 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 22.6%, was worse in percentage terms than any single day of the 1929 crash.
Effects and academic debate
Together, the 1929 stock market crash and the Great Depression formed the biggest financial crisis of the 20th century.[20] The panic of October 1929 has come to serve as a symbol of the economic contraction that gripped the world during the next decade.[21] The crash of 1929 caused fear mixed with a vertiginous disorientation, but shock was quickly cauterized with denial, both official and mass-delusional.[22] The falls in share prices on October 24 and 29, 1929 were practically instantaneous in all financial markets, except Japan.[23]
The Wall Street Crash had a major impact on the U.S. and world economy, and it has been the source of intense academic debate—historical, economic and political—from its aftermath until the present day. Some people believed that abuses by utility holding companies contributed to the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and the Depression that followed.[24] Many people blamed the crash on commercial banks that were too eager to put deposits at risk on the stock market.[25]
The 1929 crash brought the Roaring Twenties to a shuddering halt.[26] As tentatively expressed by economic historian Charles Kindleberger, in 1929 there was no lender of last resort effectively present, which, if it had existed and were properly exercised, would have been key in shortening the business slowdown[s] that normally follows financial crises.[23] The crash marked the beginning of widespread and long-lasting consequences for the United States. Historians still debate the question: did the 1929 Crash spark The Depression,[27] or did it merely coincide with the bursting of a loose credit-inspired economic bubble? Only 16% of American households were invested in the stock market within the United States during the period leading up to the depression, suggesting that the crash carried somewhat less of a weight in causing the depression.
However, the psychological effects of the crash reverberated across the nation as business became aware of the difficulties in securing capital markets investments for new projects and expansions. Business uncertainty naturally affects job security for employees, and as the American worker (the consumer) faced uncertainty with regards to income, naturally the propensity to consume declined. The decline in stock prices caused bankruptcies and severe macroeconomic difficulties including contraction of credit, business closures, firing of workers, bank failures, decline of the money supply, and other economic depressing events.
The resultant rise of mass unemployment is seen as a result of the crash, although the crash is by no means the sole event that contributed to the depression. The Wall Street Crash is usually seen as having the greatest impact on the events that followed and therefore is widely regarded as signaling the downward economic slide that initiated the Great Depression. True or not, the consequences were dire for almost everybody. Most academic experts agree on one aspect of the crash: It wiped out billions of dollars of wealth in one day, and this immediately depressed consumer buying.[27]
The failure set off a worldwide run on US gold deposits (i.e., the dollar), and forced the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates into the slump. Some 4,000 banks and other lenders ultimately failed. Also, the uptick rule,[28] which allowed short selling only when the last tick in a stock's price was positive, was implemented after the 1929 market crash to prevent short sellers from driving the price of a stock down in a bear raid.[29]
Economists and historians disagree as to what role the crash played in subsequent economic, social, and political events. The Economist argued in a 1998 article that the Depression did not start with the stockmarket crash.[30] Nor was it clear at the time of the crash that a depression was starting. They asked whether a very serious Stock Exchange collapse can produce a serious setback to industry when industrial production is for the most part in a healthy and balanced condition? They argued that there must be some setback, but there was not yet sufficient evidence to prove that it will be long or that it need go to the length of producing a general industrial depression.[31]
But The Economist also cautioned that some bank failures are also to be expected and some banks may not have any reserves left for financing commercial and industrial enterprises. They concluded that the position of the banks is the key to the situation, but what was going to happen could not have been foreseen."[32]
Many academics see the Wall Street Crash of 1929 as part of a historical process that was a part of the new theories of boom and bust. According to economists such as Joseph Schumpeter and Nikolai Kondratieff the crash was merely a historical event in the continuing process known as economic cycles. The impact of the crash was merely to increase the speed at which the cycle proceeded to its next level.
Milton Friedman's A Monetary History of the United States, co-written with Anna Schwartz, makes the argument that what made the "great contraction" so severe was not the downturn in the business cycle, trade protectionism, or the 1929 stock market crash. But instead what plunged the country into a deep depression, was the collapse of the banking system during three waves of panics over the 1930-33 period.[33]
See also
Notes
- ^ Bone, James. "The beginner's guide to stock markets". The Times. London. Archived from the original on May 25, 2010. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
The most savage bear market of all time was the Wall Street Crash of 1929–1932, in which share prices fell by 89 per cent.
- ^ "Stock Market Crash of 1929". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
- ^ a b Salsman, Richard M. "The Cause and Consequences of the Great Depression, Part 1: What Made the Roaring '20s Roar", The Intellectual Activist, ISSN 0730-2355, June 2004, p. 16.
- ^ "America gets depressed by thoughts of 1929 revisited" The Sunday Times
- ^ "Timeline: A selected Wall Street chronology". PBS. Retrieved 2008-09-30.
- ^ Teach, Edward (May 1, 2007). "The Bright Side of Bubbles". CFO. Retrieved October 1, 2008.
- ^ Wanniski, Jude The Way the World Works ISBN 0-89526-344-0, 1978 Gateway Editions
- ^ The Great Depression, by Robert Goldston, pages 39–40
- ^ "The Panic of 2008? What Do We Name the Crisis?" The Wall Street Journal
- ^ "Timeline". NYSE Euronext. NYSE. Retrieved 2008-10-01.
- ^ a b Weeks, Linton. "History's Advice During A Panic? Don't Panic". NPR. Retrieved 2008-10-01.
- ^ "The Crash of 1929". PBS. Retrieved 2008-10-01.
- ^ a b New York: A Documentary Film PBS
- ^ "Dow Jones Industrial Average All-Time Largest One Day Gains and Losses". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved May 11, 2011.
- ^ "DJIA 1929 to Present", Yahoo! Finance
- ^ "U.S. Industrial Stocks Pass 1929 Peak", The Times, November 24, 1954, p. 12.
- ^ Lambert, Richard (July 19, 2008). "Crashes, Bangs & Wallops". Financial Times. Retrieved September 30, 2008.
At the turn of the 20th century stock market speculation was restricted to professionals, but the 1920s saw millions of 'ordinary Americans' investing in the New York Stock Exchange. By August 1929, brokers had lent small investors more than two-thirds of the face value of the stocks they were buying on margin – more than $8.5bn was out on loan.
- ^ Facing the facts: an economic diagnosis. Retrieved 2008-09-30.
- ^ Shiller, Robert (2005-03-17). "Irrational Exuberance, Second Edition". Princeton University Press. Retrieved 2007-02-03.
- ^ "Paulson affirms Bush assessment", The Washington Times
- ^ Scardino, Albert (1987-10-21). "The Market Turmoil: Past lessons, present advice; Did '29 Crash Spark The Depression?". The New York Times.
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(help) - ^ "Downtown bestiary" The Times
- ^ a b "Crashes, Bangs & Wallops" Financial Times
- ^ Jameson, Angela (August 10, 2005),"Pyramid structures brought down by Wall Street Crash" The Times, Retrieved March 17, 2010
- ^ "Death of the Brokerage: The Future of Wall Street" National Public Radio
- ^ "Kaboom!...and bust. The crash of 2008" The Times
- ^ a b "The Market Turmoil: Past lessons, present advice; Did '29 Crash Spark The Depression?" The New York Times
- ^ "Practice has plenty of historical precedents" Financial Times
- ^ "Funds want 'uptick' rule back" Financial Times
- ^ "Economics focus: The Great Depression" The Economist
- ^ "Reactions of the Wall Street slump" The Economist
- ^ "Reactions of the Wall Street slump" The Economist
- ^ "Panic control" The Washington Times
Further reading
- Bierman, Harold (March 26, 2008). Whaples, Robert (ed.). "The 1929 Stock Market Crash". EH.Net Encyclopedia. Santa Clara, CA: Economic History Association. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
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ignored (help) - Brooks, John. (1969). Once in Golconda: A True Drama of Wall Street 1920–1938. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-393-01375-8.
- Galbraith, John Kenneth. (1954). The Great Crash, 1929. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-85999-9.
- Klein, Maury. (2001). Rainbow's End: The Crash of 1929. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513516-4.
- Klingaman, William K. (1989). 1929: The Year of the Great Crash. New York: Harper & Row. ISBN 0-06-016081-0.
- Reed, Lawrence W. (1981 & 2008). Great Myths of the Great Depression. Midland, MI: Mackinac Center.
- Rothbard, Murray N. (2000). "America's Great Depression" (PDF) (5th ed.). Auburn, AL: The Ludwig von Mises Institute. ISBN 978-0-945466-05-5. Retrieved May 13, 2010.
{{cite web}}
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ignored (help) - Salsman, Richard M. "The Cause and Consequences of the Great Depression" in The Intellectual Activist, ISSN 0730-2355.
- "Part 1: What Made the Roaring '20s Roar", June 2004, pp. 16–24.
- "Part 2: Hoover's Progressive Assault on Business", July 2004, pp. 10–20.
- "Part 3: Roosevelt's Raw Deal", August 2004, pp. 9–20.
- "Part 4: Freedom and Prosperity", January 2005, pp. 14–23.
- Shachtman, Tom. (1979). The Day America Crashed. New York: G.P. Putnam. ISBN 0-399-11613-3.
- Thomas, Gordon & Morgan-Witts, Max. (1979). The Day the Bubble Burst: A Social History of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-14370-2.