The 1929 Stock Market Crash - Black Thursday - Extra History - YouTube

Channel: Extra Credits

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March 4th, 1929
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Washington D.C. The inauguration of Herbert Hoover.
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"We have reached a higher degree of comfort and security than ever existed before in the history of the world"
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--says America's 31st president--
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"Through liberation from widespread poverty,
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"we have reached a higher degree of individual freedom than ever before".
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Hoover's campaign had focused on prosperity.
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Though he had not personally approved it, a local campaign flier had stated that
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republican policies had put a chicken in every pot, and a car in the backyard.
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"In no nation are the institutions of progress more advanced.
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"In no nation are the fruits of accomplishments more secure."
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"In no nation is the government more worthy of respect, No country more loved by its people."
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"I have an abiding faith in their capacity, integrity and high purpose."
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" I have no fears for the future of our country. It is bright with hope."
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Black Thursday is six months away
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Intro music [Birth of the People]
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The month of Hoover's inauguration, one number is on the lips of every trader on Wall Street:
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381
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An all-time high for the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
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From the outside, the economy looks strong but there are worrying signs.
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For nine years, the stock market has climbed, increasing six-fold from its level in1921.
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And the relentless upward trend makes investments look like a sure thing and throughout the second half of the 1920s,
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more people buy into the market than ever before
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And not just stock brokers or captains of industry;
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Factory workers, restaurant owners and even shoeshine boys are all putting money in.
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One market analyst says the Dow has reached a permanently high plateau
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Steady gains make investing seem like easy cash.
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Especially because you don't even need money to get into the market,
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because stockbrokers at the bank offer loans for investors to buy stock,
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a practice called "buying on the margin."
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And the beauty is everybody makes money, with the upward climb of the market,
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you can put down 10% of a stock's worth,
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take out a loan from your broker for the rest, and then sell the stock when the value goes up high enough to pay off
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The loan and net yourself a profit.
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People mortgage their homes, even their businesses to buy stock, sinking all their savings into it.
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And why not? It's a sure thing...
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Unless, there's a margin call, because the stock is actually the collateral for the loan,
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so if a value of a stock drops, the down payment the investor has provided has essentially shrunk.
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In that case, the broker who lend the money can ask the investor
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to immediately provide more money to repay a minimum amount of the loan,
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and if they can't, the investor then has to sell the stock to cover the loan
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But investors aren't the only ones borrowing money.
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Easy loans and installment buying have fueled the economic boom of the 1920s
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Businesses take out loans to expand,
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families buy new household goods and home improvements,
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and Henry Ford offers the Model T in installments,
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creating a massive boom in Auto Sales,
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that in turn fuels the American steel glass, petroleum and rubber industries.
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And most crucially, farms borrow money to mechanize.
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Pushed to surge crop production during World War One,
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farmers borrow money to both expand their acreage and by tractors, harvesters and other equipment.
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The problem is, this new production capacity floods the market with cheap agricultural goods,
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making it now more difficult for the leveraged farms to make money.
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In other words, America is stuffed with bad loans.
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In fact by 1929,
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the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is so worried about buying on the margin, that they raise the lending rate to discourage borrowing.
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But this, unfortunately, has a knock-on effect.
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Central banks in Europe now feel they have to match the new rate,
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sending many of those nations, still recovering from World War I, into recession.
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This sudden uncertainty, along with a well-respected analyst saying
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that they believe the market is overvalued and might crash,
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trigger a few market shocks in October, but the Dow always recovers its value before the end of the day.
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Until-
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October 24th, 1929-
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Black Thursday.
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The shouting starts right after the opening bell...
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(Sell, sell, sell)
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A Feeding frenzy.
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No one knows what's happening,
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but investors sentiment has soured and the panic is infectious.
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Minutes into the trading day, the market loses 11% of its value.
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Floor traders shove, scream. So many trades happen so fast,
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the stock ticker that brings the market real-time to traders across the country can't record the wild fluctuation in price,
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meaning stock brokers in Chicago and California are trading based on prices that are four hours old.
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People begin gathering outside on the street, sensing the chaos.
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Rumors fly around Wall Street, that stockbrokers are committing suicide , leaping from the windows of their buildings.
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But these reports are false, fed by the death of a German chemist who had really-- though accidentally-- fallen out of a hotel window.
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However in the panic, the public takes these rumors as gospel.
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In a back room, several titans of banking meet to try to halt the chaos.
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There's the head of chase National Bank,
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the head of Morgan Bank,
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and the head of National City Bank of New York.
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These men remembered the last financial Crisis.
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The panic of 1907, where the market had lost half of its value within three weeks.
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And the market only steadied when JP Morgan had gathered a consortium of banking friends
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to make big investments in both the stock market and the banks.
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They decide to do the same.
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Between them, they gather a pot of money and hand it to Richard Whitney,
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vice-president of the New York Stock Exchange
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He walks onto the trading floor, attracting everyone's attention,
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and it makes a huge buy of US Steel, offering a price well above what it's currently trading at.
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Then, he does the same for other major companies, showing his faith in the market.
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It has the desired effect - the market begins to climb, and at the closing bell,
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it's only lost six point three eight points, but it isn't over.
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Though the market has temporarily calmed, that big drop has shaken traders' faith.
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The margin calls start going out.
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And all over America: dinner cooks, busboys and farmers,
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pick up their phone to find out they suddenly owe their brokers money, due immediately.
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Some amounts are massive; $500, $1,000.
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Sums that, in 1929, you might not even be able to cover by selling a car or a house,
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even if you could sell a car or a house that fast.
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But people most certainly try.
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October 28th,
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Black Monday:
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The opening bell signals pandemonium.
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Floor traders shout and shove - everyone wants to get out of the market;
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well, some don't want to, they have to.
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Selling stocks to repay loans because their clients couldn't pony up enough for the margin call.
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And everyone wants out, fast.
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Values are tanking so quickly, that the difference between selling now and selling 30 minutes from now
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could mean another 10 percent of value loss.
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And there's such trading volume, that some trades are never even recorded,
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and by the end of this day, the Dow has lost another 12.82% of its value,
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and the panic continues.
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October 29th, Black Tuesday.
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The market won't stop bleeding.
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People are getting into fistfights on the trading floor.
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The problem is that even though everyone is selling,
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no one's buying.
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It keeps going down, down, down
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Shell-shocked floor traders look at each other, trading slips spilling out of their pockets.
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Some are now so worthless, they leave them on the floor.
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The market has dropped 23% in two days, and would keep dropping.
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Another emergency stock purchase by banking consortiums would lead to a one-day boost,
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and it would even rally the next month.
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But the Dow entered a steady descent that would not hit bottom until mid 1932, in the depth of the Great Depression.
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But it's important to remember that the crash and the depression are not the same thing.
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Historians still argue about how connected they were.
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In fact the depression proper would not hit until months later,
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when banks started to fail from bad loans and unemployment rose.
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Then, as today, it's important to remember that the stock market isn't the same thing as the economy.
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The Dow Jones recovered faster than the country as a whole.
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But the crash shook consumer confidence and wiped out the savings of small investors,
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leading to fewer purchases of items like cars at a time when auto manufacturing was a large part of the American economy.
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Whether responsible for the depression or not,
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the 1929 crash would symbolize the start of very hard times.
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Within a few short years Ford's assembly line ground to a halt, sending unemployment in Detroit to 34%.
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Half of construction workers were without work.
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The country watched the US Army deploy tanks and tear gas against a World War one veteran's protests,
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and great dust storms tore across the plains making its snow red in New England.
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A decade of disasters: ecological, financial, and deeply personal, all heralded by The Wall Street Crash.
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And while I'm sure we'll cover the depression in more detail someday,
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for now, it is good to remember that as hard as those times were, we got through them.
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It took perseverance and cooperation,
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but we did recover, even when things looked dark, we came back.
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Until next time stay safe everyone
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Legendary thanks to Ahmed Zayat Turk, Alicia Bramble, Casey Mishka, Dominic Valenciana Gunnar Clovis, Kayo Murgatroyd
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EL Manaoune Cherkaoui and Orels1