Financial Trading Blog
Anniversary of Black Thursday 1929
Ninety-three years ago today, the US stock market had its most dramatic crash. With worries of recession circulating and tightening liquidity conditions, it's a topical anniversary.
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It's not just one event
The 1929 stock market crash caught many traders by surprise. But the economic situation had been getting worse for months before that. While dramatic, it wasn't the stock market crash that caused the recession and subsequent depression. Instead, October 24, 1929, was simply the date in which the reality of the economy became too apparent to the stock market to keep ignoring.
In March that year, the Fed warned that speculation was getting out of hand. A private banker came in to buy up shares and shored up the market. Through the summer, the economic situation in the US deteriorated, but the stock market kept going up. The London Stock Exchange crashed in September, and US markets declined through the month.
It was only the start
A decline to 15 would be equal to a 45% drop in p/e, reflecting a similar fall down to 17k, which is quite impossible to achieve unless there is a depression.
Key takeaways
The 1929 stock market crash was not the cause of the recession and subsequent depression but rather a symptom of the deteriorating economy and unequal wealth distribution. Policymakers tried to fix it by putting money in consumers' pockets but failed, as it ended up being the Great Depression, which didn't end until WWII started. Today's stock market is overpriced, but it has been since 2009. If history repeats itself, it is due for a significant drop.
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