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« First-Quarter GDP Report | Main | Euro So Beautiful » April 27, 2007 65 Years Ago TodayThis is a big year for stock market history buffs. In 2007, we’re celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Panic of 1907 (okay, maybe not celebrate), the 75th anniversary of the 1932 low, the 25th anniversary of the 1982 bull market and the 20th anniversary of the 1987 crash. It’s also been five years since the 2002 low and ten years since the East Asian financial crisis. All in all, happy times for the market history crowd. Tomorrow will mark another milestone—65 years since the 1942 low. On April 28, 1942, The Dow bottomed at 92.92. That’s not just low. It’s low, low, loooow. The market was still reeling from Pearl Harbor, and the country was starting to realize how much work lay ahead. The only good news was Jimmy Doolittle’s daring raid over Tokyo ten days before. But think about how investors must have felt. This was 13 years after 1929, yet the market was still just one-quarter of its peak. The Dow was even 10% below its level from January 1906, more than 36 years before! That would be like the Dow today trying to break 770. The night, FDR gave a fireside chat detailing his economic policy for the war. This is part of what he said: You do not have to be a professor of mathematics or economics to see that if people with plenty of cash start bidding against each other for scarce goods, the price of those goods (them) goes up. Good golly! Can you imagine any politician giving a speech like that? In today’s terms, $25,000 is about $315,000. I would hardly say this speech was the catalyst, but the market did indeed take off. This was probably the greatest long-term bull market in history. Within two years, the Dow was up 50%, and it doubled by 1945. By 1955, the Dow was up fivefold, and it doubled again ten years later. The market really didn’t see any pause until 1966 when inflation started to have a major impact. Twenty four years after FDR’s speech, the Dow had advanced close to 1,000% and that’s not counting dividends. Posted by edelfenbein at April 27, 2007 2:01 PM |
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