The 1929 Stock Market Crash
In early 1928 the Dow Jones Average went from a low of 191 to a high of 300 in December of 1928 and peaked at 381 in September of 1929. 1929...) It was anticipated that the increases in earnings and dividends would continue. (1929...) Price to earnings ratio's rose from 10 to 12 to 20 and higher for the market's favorite stocks. (1929...) Observers believed that stock market prices in the first 6 months of 1929 were high, while others saw them to be cheap. (1929...) On October 3rd, the Dow Jones Average began to drop, declining through out the week of October 14th. (1929...) On the night of Monday, October 21st, 1929, margin calls were heavy and Dutch and German calls came in to sell overnight for the Tuesday morning opening. (1929...) On Tuesday morning, out of town banks and corporations called in $150 million of call loans, and Wall Street was in a panic before the New York Stock Exchange opened. (1929...) On Thursday, October 24th, 1929, people began to sell their stocks as fast as they could., sell orders flooded market exchanges. (1929...) This day became known as Black Thursday. (Black Thursday...) On a normal day, only 750-800 members of the New York Stock Exchange started the exchange. (1929...) There were 1100 members on
the floor for the morning opening. (1929...) Furthermore, the exchange directed all employees to be on the floor since there were numerous margin calls and sell orders placed overnight, extra telephone staff was arranged at the member's boxes around the floor. (1929...) The Dow Jones Average closed at 299 that day. (1929...) On Tuesday, October 29th, 1929, the crash began. (1929...) Within the first few hours , the price fell so far as to wipe out all gains that had been made the entire previous year. (1929...) This day the Dow Jones Average would close at 230. (1929...) Between October 29th, and November 13 over 30 billion dollars disappeared from the American economy. (1929...) It took nearly 25 years for many of the stocks to recover. (1929...) By mid November, the value of the New York Stock Exchange listings had dropped over 40%, a loss of $26 billion. (1929-1931) At one point in the crash tickers were 68 minutes behind. (1929-1931) An average of about $50,000,000 was wiped out in a minute on the exchange. (1929-1931) A few investors that lost all of their money jumped to their deaths from office buildings. Others gathered in the streets outside the Stock Exchange to learn how much they lost.( Black Thursday...) The Cause There are five proposed reason's why the stock market crashed. On of the reasons was that stocks were overpriced and the crash brought the share prices back to a normal level. Some studies using standard measures of stock value, such as Price/Earning ratios and Price/Dividend ratios, argue that the share prices weren't too high. Another reason is that there was massive frauds and illegal activity. However, evidence revealed that there was probably very little actual insider trading or illegal manipulation. (1929...) Margin buying is another reason that people believed that the crash happened. Though it is not the main reason, there was very littl
Some common words found in the essay are:
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Approximate Word count = 1268
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
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