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Published bySabrina Montgomery Modified over 9 years ago
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EH447, 08/09, Week 4-1 Great Depressions in Economic History A Bubble in the 1929 Stock Market? Albrecht Ritschl
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Bubble hypothesis Frenetic stock market activity (Galbraith, 1958, many others) Index increased faster than dividends (Rapoport/White, 1991)
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No-bubble hypothesis Fisher (1929) McGrattan and Prescott (2004): –Price/earnings ratios not out of ordinary –Capital taxes far lower than today –Market capitalisation 1.66 x GNP –Tangible capital 1.26 x GNP 30% less? –Intangible capital 0.87 x GNP 12% more
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An intermediate position Examine comovement between stock market and Leading indicator of investment
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Speculative bubble? The U.S. stock market 1920-35
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Tobin’s q q = =
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Tobin’s investment hypothesis Machinery orders an indicator of I Deflated version of Dow Jones an indicator of q
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Observations on Stock Market Strong comovement in stock prices and orders of machinery Orders of machinery a leading indicator of investment Stock prices reflect (anticipated) investment / Tobin’s q holds Peaks in early 1929 and Sept 1929
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Recession in Germany in 1927
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Observations on German stock market in 1920s Comovement between machine orders and stock market, just like in U.S. BUT Comovement is only between stock market and DOMESTIC orders INTERNATIONAL orders peak in late 1929, in line with U.S. market NO STOCK MKT CRASH IN 1929
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Speculative bubble? Maybe... Market 30% overvalued if account for tangible capital only BUT Market undervalued if include intangible capital Financial market in sync with planned real investment
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