The Planned 'Panic' of 1929 - Printable Version +- Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora) +-- Forum: Deep Politics Forum (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Money, Banking, Finance, and Insurance (https://deeppoliticsforum.com/fora/forum-7.html) +--- Thread: The Planned 'Panic' of 1929 (/thread-665.html) |
The Planned 'Panic' of 1929 - Peter Lemkin - 09-01-2009 I was just reading an insider account of the FDR Presidency by his son-in-law. He was present in the White House later much of the time and knew of the events personally. He had been a stock-broker during the 'crash' and has this interesting 'bit' to say - about it being planned and pulled-off with precision...... The book is Curtis B. Dall's Franklin Delano ROOSEVELT - My Exploited Father-in-Law. This from page 112: "For six years the stock market and other markets had been rising. Huge profits had been parlayed from modest starts by many people. Much of it was on paper. Most all the market prognosticators were still bullish and advised the market was a "buy" on important reactions. Roger Babson, a well-known investment counselor, had been continually sounding a note of caution, that stocks were a "sale" on strong points. Of course, he had been wrong for a long while, but on October 24, 1929, he was more than right. On one or two previous occasions the Panic had nearly started. Perhaps the stock market had been probed by powerful forces. Perhaps some foreign interests were getting out, first, those who sought and planned the downward readjustment of prices for profit. In any event, on October 24, 1929, the real crash started! By late morning on the New York Stock Exchange, the tape was hopelessly behind the market. "Floor prices" in leading stocks had to be flashed to the tape direct from the specialists' posts. In many cases, the floor prices were "points" under last-sale prices appearing on the tape throughout the country. This fact in itself created fear and much uncertainty, adding impetus to the recurring stock-selling waves. Around noon, as I maneuvered through the mob scene there, ugly rumors began to be whispered about the folding of "this house" and "that house", such as Doak & Company! Our New York office, like others, was in great turmoil. I was fighting to get stock executions on the Floor for our orders, and getting "spot" sales information on leading big stocks for the office to relay to our frantic customers. The Floor itself was a scene! There, manners and Floor 113 procedure were thrown to the winds. It was almost a riot at times. In many cases, it was sell or shortly be "called" by a bank protecting its bank loan. As I recall it, Sir Winston Churchill appeared about 2:15 in the Visitor's Gallery as a "spectator". He was here in this country, allegedly, on what was blandly described by him as a Lecture Tour. No one on the Stock Exchange Floor, however, paid the slightest attention to him, but he got an eye full. Perhaps he had lunched with Mr. Baruch. Perhaps he had been invited to see "the show" which some feel was planned several months previously. The Panic was raging in full force. It was indeed a show! Ugly rumors persisted and deepened. Some distracted people had jumped out of high windows in nearby buildings unable to face their losses. Sirens from police cars were wailing, which created a strange, eerie feeling. I was not jumpy. I just felt tense. It was like a battle; people were dying. Just how many houses were "shaky", no one really knew. The banks were now heavily involved as prices fell. When evening came, the tall buildings of Wall Street were ablaze with lights burning far into the night, some blazing all night. Many office managers, margin clerks, and cashiers dozed in chairs or slept on the floor in the offices. Partners looked at each other with deep concern and talked quietly. That day, 12,894,650 shares were traded; on October 29th, 16,410,030 shares. Record breaking! The Boom of the Twenties was over! Of course, there were subsequent brief rallies in the market, but they were short lived. The year-end statements of most firms showed losses that were staggering. Mine were. Soon to feel the effect of the great decline in stock prices was the real estate market, then stores, and then business in general. Real estate values slumped badly. The financial community began slowly to regroup its forces. Some stronger firms took over some weaker houses. Wall Street alone was not involved; "Main Street" was right in there with it! Many factors were undoubtedly involved and contributed to that catastrophic event. Even those on the inside of world money affairs could not tell exactly when the big "break!' would occur. They merely knew that a "break" would occur. I recall the observation made by Bernard Baruch, referring to the stock market, in the spring of 1929, that "he saw storm warnings." Later, in July, he was reported by the press as visiting and vacationing in the south of France, with banker friends. According to newspaper reports, he left Southern France with Winston Churchill for Scotland early in August to attend the opening of the Grouse Shooting season there. In September, came another "flurry" in the stock market, and then in October, "the real McCoy"! In reviewing the crash of '29, 1 have often wondered if the reported meeting of those very influential financial leaders assembled in Europe in July and August, had a direct bearing on the October opening of the "Financial Grouse Shooting Season" on Main Street, U.S.A.1 I think so. Sir Winston attended both planned "openings" that summer and fall and his observations on the latter event would have been especially interesting to many of us, perhaps quite enlightening." ......interesting! The Planned 'Panic' of 1929 - Peter Lemkin - 11-01-2009 http://www.tarpley.net/29crash.htm The Planned 'Panic' of 1929 - David Guyatt - 11-01-2009 I think there very likely was insider plundering taking place in the 1929 stock market crash, but I don't think Winston Churchill was part of that. Indeed, he lost the bulk of his fortune in that crash and became almost penniless as a result (and dependent on Baruch who kept him financially afloat - from which think WWII). Now if you were to name J P Morgan, I think that could be true. |