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Posts Tagged ‘Panic of 1907

“Financial crises are like fireworks: they illuminate the sky even as they go pop”*…

San Francisco today, and just after the 1906 Earthquake

The unpredictable outbreak of the COVID pandemic caught the whole world off guard and brought strong economies to their knees. Has an exogenous shock ever blindsided markets like this before? As Jamie Catherwood explains, of course it has…

On the morning of April 18, 1906, at 5:13 AM, an earthquake registering 8.3 on the Richter scale tore through San Francisco. The earthquake itself only lasted 45-60 seconds, but was followed by massive fires that blazed for four days and nights, destroying entire sections of the city, Making matters worse, the earthquake ruptured the city’s water pipes, leaving firefighters helpless in fighting the flames.

Eventually, the earthquake and ensuing inferno destroyed 490 city blocks, some 25,000 buildings, forced 55–73% of the city’s population into homelessness, and killed almost 3,000 people. In a matter of days, the Pacific West trading hub looked like a war-torn European city in World War II.

The unpredictable nature of San Francisco’s earthquake made it all the more damaging, and had a domino effect in seemingly unrelated areas of the economy…

The stock market fell immediately in the aftermath of the disaster; but more damagingly, British insurers (who covered much of San Francisco) had to ship mountains of gold to the U.S. to cover claims… which led the Bank of England to raise interest rates… which raised them around the world… which squelched speculative stock trading… which led to the collapse of a major Investment Trust (a then-prevalent form of “shadow bank”)…

The fascinating– and cautionary– story of The Panic of 1907, from @InvestorAmnesia.

James Buchan

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As we prioritize preparedness, we might recall that it was on this date in 1933, in the depth on the Depression, that Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered his first inaugural address.  Although the speech was short on specifics, Roosevelt identified two immediate objectives: getting people back to work and “strict supervision of all banking and credits and investments.”

The next day, cabinet members joined with Treasury and Federal Reserve officials to lay the groundwork for a national bank holiday, and at 1:00 a.m. on Monday, March 6, President Roosevelt issued a proclamation ordering the suspension of all banking transactions, effective immediately.  The nationwide bank holiday was to extend through Thursday, March 9, at which time Congress would convene in extraordinary session to consider emergency legislation aimed at restoring public confidence in the financial system.

It was a last-ditch effort: in the three years leading up to it thousands of banks had failed.  But a new round of problems that began in early 1933 placed a severe strain (largely, foreign and domestic holders of US currency rapidly losing faith in paper money and redeeming dollars at an alarming rate) on New York banks, many of which held balances for banks in other parts of the country.

The crisis began to subside on March 9, when Congress passed the Emergency Banking Act. On March 13, only four days after the emergency legislation went into effect, member banks in Federal Reserve cities received permission to reopen. By March 15, banks controlling 90 percent of the country’s banking resources had resumed operations and deposits far exceeded withdrawals. Although some 4,000 banks would remain closed forever and full economic recovery was still years in the future, the worst of the banking crisis seemed to be over.

Crowds gathered on Wall Street as banks reopened on March 13, 1933, after the Bank Holiday

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