Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byLouise Hope Joseph Modified over 8 years ago
1
Stock Market Crash The Booming Economy Comes to a Screeching Halt
2
Troubling Signs Despite the appearance of a healthy economy, there were dangerous signs: Uneven prosperity: generally, the rich got richer—less than 1% made more than $100,000 Increase in personal debt (installment plan) Playing the stock market—speculation Overproduction Lower farm prices Workers had hardships (poor conditions)
4
Stock Market Practices Buying on margin: investors in the stock market could pay just a portion of the actual stock price and borrow the rest If a stock went up, people could sell and pay back the broker Sometimes people would take the value of the stock and use it to borrow more, or sell the stock to buy other products Speculation: as more people bought stock, the prices rose until the value exceeded the real potential of the company Brokers drove up the prices of stock to make money
5
Buying on Margin
6
Stock Market Crashes - October 29, 1929 The stock market grew until September, 1929 As prices began to drop, nervous brokers started to call in loans (Margin Call), while other brokers gave out more & investors sold to get out. Black Thursday: Oct. 24, stocks dropped sharply. Bankers tried to reassure the public, and even pooled money to try to lift prices back up Black Tuesday: The bankers’ gains were temporary. On Tuesday, Oct. 29, the market went into free-fall, with losses of $30 billion
7
Activity – Your Stock Market Losses
9
Black Thursday: Oct. 24, 1929
10
Black Tuesday: Oct. 29, 1929
12
Beyond the Investors At first, only those with stock were affected by the Great Crash Banks and brokers started to call in their loans (wanted their money)—few people could pay them back Banks didn’t have enough cash to cover withdrawals as depositors rushed to get their money out Banks failed, and depositors’ money disappeared Factories began closing—fewer jobs available
15
Unemployment Lines
16
Beyond the Investors (cont’d) Farm prices continued to drop—more farms fail, more foreclosures as banks seek money World effects: the U.S. no longer a strong market Investment in Europe dropped Germany couldn’t afford reparations without U.S. investment Europeans couldn’t afford American goods
17
Bad Practices Contributed to Ruin Overspeculation: banks lent out too much money—they couldn’t cover potential loss Investors used stock bought on margin as collateral for other loans; when stock value fell, collateral value fell Government policies: the Federal Reserve reduced the interest rate and put more money in circulation to meet the needs of the boom As overspeculation increased, the Reserve limited the amount of money (discourages lending) When the Great Crash hit, there wasn’t enough money to help Overproduction, uneven distribution of wealth
18
Reading Qs – The Great Depression
20
Graphic Organizer – The Great Depression: Causes
21
Reading Qs – The Federal Reserve
22
Activity – Bank on It
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.