The Wall Street Crash,
1929
The "Roaring 20s" that followed the end of World
War I was a period of prosperity for most Americans. As the economy grew, stock
prices soared. By the end of the decade, as many as 25 million Americans had
placed money in the stock market in order to share in the wealth. The best part
of the process was that you didn't need a lot of cash to join the party. You
could buy your stock on margin. That is, borrow the money for your stock
purchase using the value of the stock itself as collateral. It is estimated
that by 1929, the total amount of debt amassed by the practice had reached six
billion dollars. It was a house of cards that remained erect as long as stocks
continued to increase in value. However, if stock prices plummeted, the whole
rickety structure could collapse.
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Variety's headline
after the Crash
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The tremors that would eventually destroy this flimsy
economic edifice made their first rumblings in September 1929. The market
dropped sharply at the beginning of the month but rose again only to drop and
rise again. The rollercoaster ride continued in October as the beginning of the
month saw another drop followed by another burst of strength. Then came Black
Thursday – October 24 – when a drop in stock prices triggered a burst of
panic-selling so frantic that it overwhelmed the Stock Exchange's ability to
keep track of the transactions.
Wall Street financers were able to reverse the downward
plunge only by buying as many shares of stock as they could over the next two
days. It was a temporary victory. Monday's opening bell unleashed a frenzy of
selling that soon turned into an uncontrolled panic that continued for the rest
of the trading day. The following day – Black Tuesday, October 29 – saw the
previous day's panic turn into bedlam on the trading floor.
According to one observer, traders "hollered and
screamed, they clawed at one another's collars. It was like a bunch of crazy
men. Every once in a while, when Radio or Steel or Auburn would take another
tumble, you'd see some poor devil collapse and fall to the floor." This
was the Crash, although few could see it at the time. The Market continued its
decline but never as dramatic. Thirty billion dollars had been lost - more than
twice the national debt. The nation reeled, and slipped into the depths of the
Great Depression.
"This was real panic."
Jonathan Leonard was a reporter who was on the scene as Wall
Street tumbled. We join his story following "Black Thursday."
"That Saturday and Sunday Wall Street hummed with
week-day activity. The great buildings were ablaze with lights all night as
sleepy clerks fought desperately to get the accounts in shape for the Monday
opening. Horrified brokers watched the selling orders accumulate. It wasn't a
flood; it was a deluge. Everybody wanted to sell-the man with five shares and
the man with ten thousand. Evidently the week-end cheer barrage had not hit its
mark.
Monday was a rout for the banking pool, which was still
supposed to be 'on guard.' If it did any net buying at all, which is doubtful,
the market paid little attention. Leading stocks broke through the support
levels as soon as trading started and kept sinking all day. Periodically the
news would circulate that the banks were about to turn the tide as they had
done on Thursday, but it didn't happen. A certain cynicism developed in the
board rooms as the day wore on. Obviously the big financial interests had
abandoned the market to its fate, probably intending to pick up the fragments
cheap when the wreck hit the final bottom. 'Very well,' said the little man, 'I
shall do the same.'
When the market finally closed, 9,212,800 shares had been
sold. The Times index of 25 industrials fell from 367.42 to 318.29. The whole
list showed alarming losses, and margin calls were on their way to those
speculators who had not already sold out.
That night Wall Street was lit up like a Christmas tree.
Restaurants, barber shops, and speakeasies were open and doing a roaring
business. Messenger boys and runners raced through the streets whooping and
singing at the tops of their lungs. Slum children invaded the district to play
with balls of ticker tape. Well-dressed gentlemen fell asleep in lunch
counters. All the downtown hotels, rooming houses, even flophouses were full of
financial employees who usually slept in the Bronx. It was probably Wall
Street's worst night. Not only had the day been bad, but everybody down to the
youngest office boy had a pretty good idea of what was going to happen
tomorrow.
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Bewildered
crowds on Wall Street
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The morning papers were black with the story of the Monday
smash. Except for rather feeble hopes that the great banks would step into the
gap they had no heart for cheerful headlines. In the inside pages, however, the
sunshine chorus continued as merry as ever. Bankers said that heavy buying had
been sighted on the horizon. Brokers were loud with "technical"
reasons why the decline could not continue.
It wasn't only the financial bigwigs who spoke up. Even the
outriders of the New Era felt that if everybody pretended to be
happy, their phoney smiles would blow the trouble away. Jimmy Walker, for
example, asked the movie houses to show only cheerful pictures. True Story
Magazine, currently suffering from delusions of grandeur, ran full page
advertisements in many papers urging all wage earners to buy luxuries on
credit. That would fix things right up. McGraw-Hill Company, another publishing
house with boom-time megalomania, told the public to avert its eyes from the
obscene spectacle in Wall Street. What they did not observe would not affect
their state of mind and good times could continue as before.
These noble but childish dabbles in mass psychology failed
as utterly as might have been expected. Even the more substantial contributions
of U.S. Steel and American Can in the shape of $1 extra dividends had the same
fate. Ordinarily such action would have sent the respective stocks shooting
upward, but in the present mood of the public it created not the slightest
ripple of interest. Steel and Can plunged down as steeply as if they had
canceled their dividends entirely. The next day, Tuesday, the 29th of October,
was the worst of all. In the first half hour 3,259,800 shares were traded,
almost a full day's work for the laboring machinery of the Exchange. The
selling pressure was wholly without precedent. It was coming from everywhere.
The wires to other cities were jammed with frantic orders to sell. So were the
cables, radio and telephones to Europe and the rest of the world. Buyers were
few, sometimes wholly absent. Often the specialists stood baffled at their
posts, sellers pressing around them and not a single buyer at any price.
This was real panic. It was what the banks had prevented on
Thursday, had slowed on Monday. Now they were helpless. Reportedly they were
trying to force their associated corporations to toss their buying power into
the whirlpool, but they were getting no results. Albert Conway, New York State
Superintendent of Insurance, took the dubious step of urging the companies
under his jurisdiction to buy common stocks. If they did so, their buying was
insufficient to halt the rout."
References:
This account appears in: Leonard, Jonathan Norton, Three Years Down (1944); Allen, Frederick, Lewis, Since Yesterday: the 30's in America (1972).
This account appears in: Leonard, Jonathan Norton, Three Years Down (1944); Allen, Frederick, Lewis, Since Yesterday: the 30's in America (1972).
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