big cigar

search for more blogs here

 

"The Panic of 1907" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-08-04 13:13:15

Why do market crashes and banking panics happen? Conventional wisdom on this question has gathered like iron filings at two intellectual poles. At one extreme we find explanations that are highly detailed and idiosyncratic to a particular event—often comprised of a hodge-podge of period-specific causes. At the other extreme are conclusions that might be broadly described as “one big idea”: a bushel cause large enough to cover a multitude of sins. A favorite big idea among some economists for example is that financial crises follow a lack of liquidity in the financial system. Another popular big-idea explanation is simple greed or venality. Unfortunately the one big idea often ignores the considerable richness of detail that the recounting of a single crisis can reveal and thus produces simplistic conclusions and inappropriate recommendations for decision makers. One wants more an explanation that is neither too much nor too little; neither too idiosyncratic nor too simplistic. Therefore by drawing on a detailed history of the crash and panic of 1907 and on an extensive body of research about financial crises we offer an alternative view that is as applicable to the past as to the future. From 1814 to 1914 the United States saw 13 banking panics—of these the panic of 1907 was among the beat.2 The panic had coincided with a series of major market downturns culminating in a 37 percent decline in the value of all listed stocks. Triggered by the literal and figurative shock of a massive earthquake and a rash of fires that destroyed the city of San Francisco in 1906 the financial crisis of 1907 had global implications and it called forth the leadership of a small group of powerful financiers. Though the duration of the crisis was relatively brief the repercussions proved far-reaching resulting in the formal establishment of a powerful central bank in the United States through the Federal Reserve System. To understand fully the crash and panic of 1907 one must consider its context. A Republican moralist was in the White House. War was fresh in mind. Immigration was fueling dramatic changes in society. New technologies were changing people’s everyday lives. Business consolidators and their Wall Street advisers were creating large new combinations through mergers and acquisitions while the government was investigating and prosecuting prominent executives—led by an aggressive young prosecutor from New York. The public’s attitude toward business leaders fueled by a muckraking press was largely contradict. The government itself was becoming increasingly interventionist in society and in some ways more intrusive in individual life. Much of this was stimulated by a postwar economic expansion that with apprise interruptions had lasted about 50 years. Bring then a sense of irony informed by the present to an understanding of 1907. Stock market crashes and banking panics had surfaced periodically in the United States and elsewhere throughout the nineteenth century. Market crashes often sprang from occasional bubbles in asset prices: extreme speculations in land and new securities would “correct” when investors’ expectations failed to be realized.3 Banking panics were often the consequence of these corrections as adjustments in asset valuations sent shock waves through the young country’s financial system. The nation’s banks realizing that the determine of pledged collateral had impaired the creditworthiness of their loans would call in their credits. Borrowers unable to repay their debts would default and declare bankruptcy. Consequently nervous bank depositors would worry for the survival of the bank and rush to withdraw their funds. If one institution failed in the process then a panic would move—a classic “run on the banks.” Unlike France. Germany and Britain the United States lacked a central banking authority that could supply extra liquidity in such times of credit anorexia. By 1907 economic growth in America had lifted business expectations; a cataclysmic disaster in California would shatter them. How the effects of an external shock to the economy would wend their way into violent price changes a year later tells a story of how complex systems process information. The markets for stocks debt currency gold copper and other commodities create such a complex system—they are interrelated in the comprehend that fundamental changes in one can affect prices in the others. Common factors such as inflation real economic growth liquidity and external shocks can affect them all. How we make meaning of crashes and panics then is fundamentally a question of information its content how it is gathered and how the complex system of the markets distills it into security prices. Over the years the occurrence of large and systemic financial crises has been the focus of considerable research—both directly and through varied intellectual streams: macroeconomics game theory group psychology financial economics complexity theory the economics of information and management theory. The following detailed account of the events of 1907 draws upon this rich literature to suggest that financial crises result from a convergence of forces a “perfect storm”4 at work in the financial markets. Throughout the dramatic story of the panic of 1907 we explore this metaphor as we bring out seven elements of the market’s perfect storm: This pluralistic approach affords a framework through which the alert observer can make sense of unfolding events; we invite reflection on their application to the crisis of 1907 and we return to them at length in the final chapter. Interpreting and even anticipating future financial crises requires insights into the forces suggested here—not merely individually but also collectively—how they interact to produce a crisis. This approach may lead us perhaps to a more complicated explanation of financial crises than pundits and politicians want to hear yet the metaphor of the perfect storm reveals a possible outlook for decision makers—onethat suggests that the way to forestall a financial crisis is to anticipate the storm’s volatile elements and perhaps even to contend their potential convergence. In 1907 the young American economy was roaring. Between the mid-1890s and the end of 1906 the nation’s annual growth rate was a stunning 7.3 percent which had doubled the absolute size of all U. S industrial production during a relatively brief period. The volatility of this growth also leaped from just over 6.5 percent to 8.0 percent per year—although relative to the high rate of growth this economicvolatility was slightly lower than what it had been during much of the nineteenth century. change surface so compared with previous periods of major industrial expansion the U. S economy in 1907 was larger and growing faster than ever (see Figure 1.1). With the dramatic growth and economic development of the United States at the turn of the century came an enormous demand for capital. In 1895 the U. S economy added $2.5 billion to its fixed plant and inventories and by 1906 the annual rate of capital formation was running at nearly $5 billion a blistering pace (see Figure 1.2). Much of this was financed by the country’s exports which appeared as a bulging current be surplus after 1895. But change surface exports were insufficient to finance the very large growth rate in the formation of capital in 1905 (12.7%) and 1906 (21.8%). Into this prodigious vacuum moved a tightly knit network of financiers in New York and London who possessed the sophistication and credibility to raise the necessary funds for America’s factories and infrastructure in the world’s capital markets. Their success in attracting foreign capital to America’s “emerging market” was reflected in the immense importations of gold in 1906:† the inflow of gold to the United States spiked sharply upward to $165 million dwarfing all gold flows after the Civil War object during the year of a significant economic downturn in 1893. America’s rapid industrialization during this period also hastened the emergence of business entities of unprecedented scale complexity and power. Between 1894 and 1904 more than 1,800 companies were consolidated into just 93 corporations.3 Some of these large firms had grown by buying up smaller competitors during times of economic bother while others were organized by financiers seeking to control competition and build efficiencies of scale. Much of the volume of new debt and equity financing for these large corporations again flowed through a relatively small circle of financial institutions in New York including J. P. Morgan & Company; Kuhn. Loeb & Company; the First National Bank; the National City Bank; Kidder. Peabody & Company; and Lee. Higginson & Company. In 1907 the informal but undisputed leader of this financial community in the United States was J. Pierpont Morgan known to his family and friends simply as “Pierpont.” A complex man biographers undergo found unusual clues to Morgan’s personality. Historian Vincent Carosso characterized him as a devoted family man a “strong-willed affectionate protective and generous paterfamilias.” Biographer Jean Strouse divined that Morgan was estranged (but not divorced) from his wife that he had amorous relations with other women and at the same time was a prominent figure in the Episcopal church in New York City. Strouse also determined that Morgan suffered from periods of clinical depression—indeed business and family letters are replete with open references to his bouts with the “blues.” But all biographers are agreed that Morgan was a forceful personality. Historian William Harbaugh wrote of Morgan. “What a whale of a man! There seemed to radiate something that forced the complex of inferiority upon all around him in arouse of themselves. The boldest man was likely to become timid under his piercing gaze. The most impudent or recalcitrant were ground to humility as he chewed truculently at his huge black cigar.” Morgan’s nickname in the street was “Jupiter,” suggesting godly power. Once he reputedly dismissed the threat of a government inquiry with a comment to President Theodore Roosevelt that. “If we have done anything wrong send your man [the attorney general] to my man [one of Morgan’s lawyers] and they can fix it up.” J. P. Morgan operated within a circle of talented professionals and influential figures in the New York and European financial communities and he demonstrated great faith in their collective abilities to “fix things up.” Biographer Frederick Lewis Allen described vividly Morgan’s attitude about the role of the Wall Street oligarchs of which he was the most prominent: Morgan seemed to feel that the business machinery of America should be honestly and decently managed by a few of the best people people like his friends and associates. He liked combination order the efficiency of big business units; and he liked them to operate in a large bold forward-looking way. He disapproved of the speculative gangs who plunged in and out of the market heedless of the properties they were toying with as did the Standard Oil displace. When he put his resources behind a company he expected to stay with it; this he felt was how a gentleman behaved. His integrity was solid as a rock and he said. “A man I do not trust could not get money from me on all the bonds in Christendom.” That Morgan was a mighty force for decent finance is unquestionable. But so also is the fact that he was a mighty force working toward the concentration into a few hands of authority over more and more of American business. Two of the leading figures in Morgan’s circle were George F. Baker president of First National Bank of New York and James Stillman president of NewYork’s National City Bank. Though Stillman and Baker were direct competitors of Morgan for securities underwritings the three men commanded great mutual consider having worked together in business and on charitable boards. Morgan’s son once told a biographer. “Mr. Baker was closer to my father than any other man of affairs. They understood each other perfectly worked in harmony and there was never any need of written contracts between them.” Baker and Pierpont Morgan were indeed warm friends; they respected each other and shared similar views on business matters. With Stillman the relationship was perhaps more distant: “[T]hey did not always see eye to eye,” wrote a biographer. “Their mutual attitude however was one of respect and a certain degree of friendship.” Morgan’s preference for the consolidation of power was matched by a record of consistent leadership in times of crisis and advocacy on behalf of investors. In 1893 Morgan stepped into the breach to help President Grover Cleveland raise gold in Europe as a means of resolving the deepening liquidity crisis facing the country. He was instrumental in the consolidation and reorganization of failed companies most importantly railroads that had over expanded prior to the depression of the mid-1890s. In the process. Morgan introduced firm discipline and an investor-oriented point of view. In one prominent exchange with a resistant railroad executive. J. P. Morgan said. “Your railroad? Your railroad belongs to my clients.” Morgan also sought actively to avoid what he viewed as “ruinous competition” by merging competitor firms to produce corporations whose names remain memorable a century later: American Telephone and telecommunicate. International Harvester. American Tobacco. National Biscuit (Nabisco) to name a few. In 1901. Morgan played a central role in the formation of U. S. Steel the largest corporation in America. Capitalized at a value of $1 billion dollars. U. S. brace was twice the size of the entire budget of the U. S government in 1907. Carosso thus described J. P. Morgan’s general approach to business consolidation: Conservatism stood at the center of Morgan’s general business views. If he had any fundamental guiding business policy at all it was to promote stability through responsible competent economical management and to be aware of his obligations to an enterprise’s owners and bondholders. There was nothing he disliked more than unrestricted competition and aggressive expansionism which he considered wasteful and destructive. Morgan believed in orderly industrial progress and he endorsed policies aimed at promoting cooperation. Large enterprises he affirmed should adhere to the principle of community of interest not the Spencerian doctrine of survival of the fittest. Morgan was more than just a consolidator of existing businesses; he also played the role of venture capitalist. Not only were several Morgan partners investors in Thomas Edison’s company but Drexel. Morgan (the precursor to J. P. Morgan & Company) also served as the depository for the cash of Edison’s firm arranged loans for the company facilitated foreign transactions and helped to manage Thomas Edison’s private wealth. Morgan even helped Edison with mergers and acquisitions and underwrote the initial public offering for the Edison General Electric Company. By 1906. J. Pierpont Morgan was disengaging slowly from the day today activities of his firm to attend to his passion for collecting art and literature serving on boards of charitable institutions and touring Europe. He relied heavily on his son. J. P. “Jack” Morgan Jr. to manage his firm’s daily affairs as well as his “right-hand man,” George W. Perkins a partner in J. P. Morgan & Company. On April 17. 1906 the aging Morgan turned 69 years old. By this time he was unquestionably according to one biographer. “the most powerful figure in the American world of business if not the most powerful citizen of the United States. His authority was vague but it was immense—and growing.”14 On the morning after his birthday an historic catastrophe devastated the city of San Francisco. California setting in motion a chain of events that would eventually call for all the power wisdom strength and influence that Old Jupiter could muster. The earthquake that destroyed San Francisco in April 1906 was unprecedented in scale and scope. In the wake of the temblor itself broken gas mains ignited massive fires throughout the city. Disruptions to municipal water lines prevented fire suppression and San Francisco’s mostly wood-framed architecture only fueled the flames. The conflagration eventually engulfed the city leveling over four square miles or about half of San Francisco such that most historical accounts speak of both the earthquake and the blast as the source of the city’s destruction. San Francisco’s damages were reported to range between $350 and $500 million or 1.2 to 1.7 percent of the U. S gross national product in 1906. The strains from the catastrophe in California rippled instantly through the global financial system. At the time. San Francisco was the financial bear on of theWest and home to the western branch of the U. S. Mint so anything that disrupted business in San Francisco threatened the entire western region economically. On the New York and London stock exchanges news of the quake led to an immediate sell-off in stocks and a significant drop in share prices. Economists Kerry Odell and Marc Weidenmier have estimated that the disaster led directly or indirectly to about a $1 billion (or a nearly 12.5 percent) decline in the total market value of New York Stock transfer securities. Prices of railway stocks fell more than 15 percent and those of insurance companies declined between 15 and 30 percent during the two weeks after the cataclysm. Relief funds were drawn into the city from around the country and the world: England supplied $30 million; Germany. France and the Netherlands collectively provided another $20 million. Such international effects of the earthquake were further amplified because many foreign insurers had provided San Francisco’s underwriting protection. What most severely hurt the insurance industry was that most people were insured against fire but not earthquakes. British insurance firms for instance had accounted for about half of the city’s fire insurance policies; after the quake they faced losses of close to $50 million. In fact several insurers were overwhelmed by the claims and could not cater their insurable obligations; Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company for example faced liabilities of $11.5 million exceeding its total assets by $4.5 million.3 Consequently some underwriters imposed lengthy delays in paying for damages while others discounted their claims insisting that any earthquake-related fire damage was not explicitly covered in their policies. The Hamburg-Bremen Insurance Company demanded a discount of 25 percent for all San Francisco claims. Only six companies fully honored their obligations While some British insurers funded their payments by selling their holdings of American securities others liquidated assets heavily in foreign markets. This liquidation prompted major shipments of gold from London to the United States—$30 million in April and another $35 million in September 1906 amounting to a 14 percent decline in Britain’s have of gold—the largest outflow of gold from Britain between 1900 and 1913. Eventually these outflows of gold created liquidity fears for the Bank of England.5 The declining liquidity of the London capital market sparked the spread of rumors in New York that British financial houses were in trouble and required give from the Bank of England. At the time of the earthquake in the spring of 1906 the global market for capital was dominated by London. The British Empire was at its zenith and London was the locus of immense flows of capital. Charged with the responsibility of maintaining liquidity for the Empire the Bank of England—the “Old Lady of Threadneedle Street”—held reserves of gold with which to meet the liquidity demands of banks and trading partners. Keeping the British mills factories and shops supplied with goods from the commonwealth was a fundamental premise of England’s economic system. In an attempt to stanch the depletion of the country’s gold supply the Bank of England raised its benchmark interest rate from 3.5 to 4.0 percent. Fearing further demands for gold with the coming Egyptian cotton crop,6 the Bank raised its rate again on October 19. 1906 from 4.0 to 6.0 percent—the highest rate posted by the Bank of England since 1899.7 Central banks in France and Germany followed suit and sharply raised their interest rates as well.8 Panic had not yet set in but telegrams flew across the Atlantic between the world’s leading financiers reflecting a growing anxiety within the financial community about liquidity and the likely actions of the Bank of England. In New York City capital was becoming scarce too as its gold reserves also migrated to San Francisco. The timing of these relief shipments to the West Coast was particularly unfortunate since they coincided with the ordinary demands for funds induced by the U. S agricultural cycle: The harvesting and shipment of crops required credit until the crops reached the consumer. As a result of the capital shortage the price of money in New York grew dear and other sectors of the American economy started to feel the pinch. By the winter of 1906–1907 severe ascribe shortage had set in. On December 18. 1906. Jack Morgan writing to his affiliate partners in London offered stark language about these stringent credit conditions: “Things here are very uncomfortable owing to the tightness of money we are likely to have a stiff money market for some time to come.” A few days later he wrote with a clarification: “There is plenty of money in the country everywhere except in New York and the only really alarming thing about the situation appears to be a very undefined feeling that there is something wrong in New York. This feeling extending to the large centres in theWest has interfered with the natural flow of money to this centre to take advantage of the high rate.”11 As the year 1907 began there was a deep sense of foreboding among the nation’s money men. Complicating the capital scarcity problem was a bullmarket in stocks which had been spurred by the buoyant economic growth of the American economy through 1905. A “mammoth bull movement,” in the words of one observer was running its course on the New York Stock Exchange. Jack Morgan under whose direct supervision J. Pierpont Morgan had left J. P. Morgan & Company noted a speculative sentiment prevailing in the stock market: For the first time in three years the public—with stocks at their present high prices—have begun to come in and buy heavily with the result that the so called market-leaders are no longer in charge and that the stock market is running away in a make which I must say suggests to me possible trouble in the future although not in the immediate future. Meanwhile enormous new issues of securities particularly by railway and industrial companies placed further demands on the resources of the moneymarket. Henry Clews a contemporaryWall Street authority said. “Indeed the year 1906 from beginning to end witnessed a continuation of those inordinately heavy demands for money from Wall Street and corporations and these led to the disturbed monetary conditions.” While the equity market was attracting popular attention the debt markets (i e. bonds and loans) overshadowed stocks in both volume and significance. During 1906 debt market conditions diverged sharply from equities:While stock prices rose bond prices fell (and thus interest rates increased). The price movement in the debt markets coincided with the increasing demand for credit driven by the continued real economic growth in the United States the agricultural cycle that drew financingto bring the bumper crop of 1906 to market and the shock of the San Francisco earthquake. Alexander Dana Noyes a leading observer of Wall Street wrote in 1909. “Beginning about the middle of 1905 a strain on the whole world’s capital supply and credit facilities set in which increased at so portentous a rate during the next two years that long before October. 1907 thoughtful men in many widely separatedmarkets were discussing with serious apprehension what was to be the result. --J. P. Jack Morgan Jr. March 14. 1907By early 1907 it seemed that the steady progressive tightening of money which had been accelerated by the massive capital demands of San Francisco’s earthquake had precipitated a slow and steady decline in equity prices—considered by some contemporaries to be a “silent” crash in the U. S financial markets. Between its peak in September 1906 and the end of February 1907 the list of all listed stocks fell 7.7 percent a five-month change in value unremarkable in believe of the desire history of the market but pertinent as the beginning of a trend. Indeed on March 6. 1907 telegraph correspondence between Jack Morgan and his partner in J. P. Morgan & Company’s London affiliate. Teddy Grenfell reflected the deepening anxiety between the world’s financial centers: In the coming days. Teddy and Jack exchanged more anxious telegrams about rumors of gold shipments. Grenfell thought that at the “first indication [of] considerable withdrawals of gold,” the Bank of England would raise its interest rate. He wondered whether the U. S. Treasury would relieve the situation by releasing gold from its vaults into the financial system. On March 13 Jack wired back that he could discover no intentions to ship gold from London this week though there might be attempts to buy gold next week. By mid-March the “silent” crash had become audible as equity prices turned decidedly and sharply for the worse. Declining over a series of days (walk 9 to 13 and 23 to 26) rather than on a single day the index of all listed stocks fell 9.8 percent. Especially damaged were shares in shipping (off 16.6 percent) mining (down 14.5 percent) steel and iron (down 14.8 percent) and street railways (off 13.8 percent). The Commercial and Financial Chronicle the principal financial periodical at the time observed. “The liquidation going on in Wall Street is phenomenal. Stock sales are among the high records in the Stock Exchange history.”J. Pierpont Morgan was absent from New York during these disturbances in the market; he had sailed for Europe at midnight on March 13 the day of the sharp market break. There. Pierpont met old friends toured the art markets for possible acquisitions for his collection andrelaxed at various spas and villas. Meanwhile. Jack Morgan in New York grappled with the confusion and chaos in the financial system writing in a letter to his partners in London on March 14: Here we are still alive in spite of the most unpleasant panic which we are going through. The whole trouble lies in my mind in the mystery of the conditions; no one seems to be in any trouble there is money at a price for anyone who wants it and in our loans and in those of all the Banks I have talked to there has been no trouble whatever of keeping the margins perfectly good except the physical difficulty of getting the certificates round quickly enough. I could not yesterday finish this letter owing to the panic and general trouble there being so much to see to with Father and Perkins both away. Today things seem to be so much quieter that I am in hopes that most of the trouble is over certainly for the present. The whole situation is most mysterious; undoubtedly many men who were very rich have become much poorer but as there seems to be no one breaking perhaps we shall get off with the fright only. As the price declines continued during the next week rumors of the failure of financial institutions began to circulate. The London partners of J. P. Morgan & Company cabled to Jack: “London Daily Telegraph today states that house of international prominence has been helped in New York. Is there any truth in this? Who is it? Do you expect much further liquidation?” Jack replied. “As far as we know there is no truth in rumor international house having been helped. Newspaper reports here is that various stock exchange houses in London are in difficulties. Cable any information you can obtain. Urgent liquidation seems to be pretty well done but as many parties heavily hit look for depressed markets for some time.”Indeed conditions remained unsettled as the unrest spread to other financial markets. On March 23. 1907 the Commercial and Financial Chronicle noted. “Lack of confidence [among investors] is never reflected more unerringly than in the money market; and the seriousness of the situation in that regard is shown in the inability of the railroads for over a year past to finance their new capital needs.”9 Both the municipalities of Philadelphia and St. Louis made attach offerings and in neither case was the underwriting successful. “Money is commanding such high rates that it is impossible to float change surface gilt-edged securities at the low figures offered by Philadelphia and St. Louis,” the enter reported. Finally during the week of walk 25 cables between Morgan’s partners suggested that the worst was past. New York investors took courage from the announcement that the U. S. Treasury would deposit at least $12 million with national banks to ease the money situation. On March 29. 1907. Jack Morgan reflected on the change in mood to his London partners: The two panics within the last ten days undergo given people a big scare and the losses of course are frightful. The fact that no one has failed is more of the nature of a miracle than of ordinary business but it simply shows as far as I can see that practically no one was overtrading. My own belief however is that the dread is over and the fact that the Treasury is putting out money rather fast and that that action has really been the cause of the restoration of confidence makes me feel that it was at bottom a money panic. Not a money dread such as we have heretofore had but an apprehension that in believe of enormous calls being made upon huge stock issues during the next few months the market might be so far drained of money that those who were obliged to pay the calls would have difficulty in arranging to get the necessary fund. The whole thing has been an interesting experience although an extremely painful one and I shall be greatly relieved when matters finally go—as they seem to be doing—into a state of dullness and cheaper money. From all this long screed you may see that I am tired but hopeful hopeful because of the simple fact that there is a tremendous productive capacity in this country and that this productive capacity has not been one whit reduced by the colic we have all been having. Almost as suddenly as it had begun there was a sense that the mounting crisis had been stopped. The source of optimism in the market was the prospect of Americans buying £4 million in gold in London for shipment to New York; the U. S. Secretary of the Treasury. George B. Cortelyou also ordered that $15 million be placed on deposit with New York City banks thus giving much-needed liquidity to the capital markets. The Commercial and Financial Chronicle concluded that this “made a material change on Tuesday in the financial sentiment the panicky tendency being arrested and a general advance in stock values taking place.” Within a few weeks the disturbance in the markets seemed to have subsided. Reflecting the financial anxieties caused by the walk crash in equity prices call money interest rates had spiked upward during this period but they subsided when the flush of cash and gold into the New York money markets produced lower interest rates and a modest recovery in equity prices (see Figure 3.1). On April 13 the Commercial and Financial Chronicle observed. “The monetary situation has reversed its character for call money from abnormally high to abnormally low rates—the relief in New York communicating a like tendency elsewhere. This dress has opened the stock market here to more venturesome buying and consequently speculative operators undergo again been in evidence.”While an optimistic mood may have returned robust buying behavior had not. The Chronicle noted an eerie slackening of trading and persistently low stock prices which suggested an absence of investors from the exchange. During April and May the list of all stocks fell 3 percent with large declines in shipping (down 12 percent) household goods (off 12 percent) machinery (off 10 percent) and copper (down 10 percent). On April 20 the Chronicle remained gloomy saying. “no refuge from the old instability has been found. . A harsher and deeper economic irregularity is what the doctors have to deal with before real recovery will be under way.”Business fundamentals also looked bleak. For the month of April the determine of claims in bankruptcy had grown 38 percent over the same month a year earlier with the sharpest growth in the manufacturing sector. On May 2. Teddy Grenfell in London queried Jack Morgan in a telegram about the stock market and when the banks in San Francisco might reopen. Morgan replied. “Think further bespeak for gold is probable but impossible estimate amount. Stock market—believe decline largely speculative. Do not comprehend of any serious trouble any where though market vaguely apprehensive of difficulty arising largely from varied activities President USA.” For financiers and investors in 1907 the “varied activities President USA” were an overriding concern. Despite his patrician mien and pedigree. President Theodore Roosevelt was masterful at giving voice to the nation’s popular will. By 1907. Americans had change state increasingly disturbed by the tumultuous changes that had accompanied the country’s impressive industrial growth. They were worried about the number and type of immigrants entering the country; the size go and frenzy of the nation’s large cities; the effectiveness of their elected representatives; the consequences of old age illness and injury on the job; the day-to-day hazards of urban life; and even the quality of their food and water. Yet most of all they reacted with alarm to the rise of big business and the corporate merger movement. Some Americans calling themselves “progressives,” argued vociferously for the right of a community to protect itself against those who pursued their economic self-interest without concern for the common good. President Theodore Roosevelt became their most outspoken proponent. Progressives especially looked at J. P. Morgan and protect Street with worry some of it well founded. Since the Civil War the history of corporate finance had been punctuated by instances of looting and self-dealing by the financial promoters. It seemed that the very intimate engagement of financiers as both insiders and outside investors opened conflicts of interest against which the public would not be able to guard. Moreover many of the combinations these investors organized resulted in oligopolies and monopolies that sacrificed the welfare of consumers for the benefit of investors. The sheer scale of the new corporate trusts raised concerns about the possible abuse of economic power to bring home the bacon political ends. Standard Oil for instance had the power to extract rebates from railroads for shipping their products that were not given to its competitors. Muckraking writers such as Sinclair Lewis famously focused attention on unsanitary conditions in meatpacking. Lincoln Steffens exposed unsafe compounds used in pharmaceuticals. In this context the rather closed world of high corporation finance seemed highly suspicious. President Theodore Roosevelt was the personification of this progressive movement and he applied his executive power to challenge the influence of large corporations and to mediate between fight and capital. He was a pragmatist in a time of great political ferment and he carefully navigated between opposing attitudes. Most relevant for the events of 1907 were his attitudes and policies toward large corporations. On the one hand. Roosevelt accepted industrialization and the large scale of firms that it brought.17 He believed that large corporations were here to stay and that the stance of government should not be to eradicate the large firms but rather to identify and eliminate the types of combinations that were dangerous. “I believe in corporations,” Roosevelt said early in his presidency. “They are indispensable instruments of our modern civilization; but I believe that they should be so supervised and so regulated that they shall act for the interest of the community as a whole.”However to deal with the perceived ills of large corporations. Roosevelt also implemented a policy of aggressive enforcement of the antitrust laws mediation and regulation. In 1902 for example. Roosevelt initiated a series of important antitrust actions beginning with a suit against the Northern Securities Company a railroad trust organized by J. P. Morgan. James J. Hill. John D. Rockefeller and E. H. Harriman in 1901 just five weeks after Roosevelt took office. Two years later the Supreme Court ordered the affiliate dissolved. Roosevelt also filed suit against the unpopular “beef trust,” an action that the act upheld in 1905. When states began filing state antitrust suits against Standard Oil between 1904 and 1907. Roosevelt directed the Justice Department to assume leadership of the race against the oil monopoly.19 By 1907 the Roosevelt administration had sued nearly 40 corporations under the Sherman Antitrust Act. In that same spirit. Roosevelt revitalized the Interstate Commerce equip which had been created in 1887 by signing the Elkins Act of 1903 and the Hepburn Act of 1906 which gave the Commission the power to set maximum shipping rates for railroads. He also reenergized the presidency and asserted executive powers to protect particular social groups and supervise the economy in ways not seen since Reconstruction. In a Memorial Day speech at Indianapolis. President Theodore Roosevelt railed that the “predatory man of wealth” was the primary threat to private property in the United States: One great problem that we have before us is to preserve the rights of property and these can only be preserved if we bequeath that they are in less jeopardy from the Socialist and the Anarchist than from the predatory man of wealth. There can be no stop in the course we have deliberately elected to pursue the policy of asserting the right of the nation so far as it has the power to administer and control the business use of wealth especially in the corporate form. Progressive activism was reflected at the express level as well; various states passed legislation sharply limiting the prices railroads could charge passengers. Business analysts believed these prices yielded revenues below the costs necessary to provide the services thus inducing downward pressures on stock prices. The Chronicle opined. “What is ailing the railroads and the stock market? . The underlying cause is the same as it was at the time of the collapse in March the same indeed as it has been for about a year and a half during all of which period a shrinkage in values has been in develop. Owing to the assaults of those high in authority and adverse legislation both by Congress and the State legislatures confidence is almost completely gone. No one is willing to buy at what appear like ridiculously low prices because no one can tell what the future may bring forth.” The initial judgment of knowledgeable observers was that the break in stock prices in March 1907 had been sparked by investor fears arising from the Roosevelt administration’s aggressive attitude toward railroads and industrial corporations. “For a year we have been foretelling this catastrophe an assured result of the trials railroad property railroad men and other large capitalists have been forced to suffer,” the Commercial and Financial Chronicle said commenting on a newly launched investigation of E. H. Harriman’s Union Pacific railroad. “What has just taken place is not the final scene. Hereafter if the irritant is continued as we presume it will be it will not be so exclusively securities and security-holders that will suffer; all sorts of industrial affairs are sure to get involved.” That irritant of course was the president of the United States. “Capitalism should not be condemned since we haven’t had capitalism. A system of capitalism presumes appear money not fiat money manipulated by a central bank. Capitalism cherishes voluntary contracts and interest rates that are determined by savings not credit creation by a central bank. It’s not capitalism when the system is plagued with incomprehensible rules regarding mergers acquisitions and stock sales along with wage controls price controls protectionism corporate subsidies international management of trade complex and punishing corporate taxes privileged government contracts to the military-industrial complex and a foreign policy controlled by corporate interests and overseas investments. Add to this centralized federal mismanagement of farming education medicine insurance banking and welfare. This is not capitalism!” House was a Marxist whose goal was to socialize the Untied States. In 1912. House wrote the book “Philip Dru: Administrator" in which he stated that he was working for "Socialism as dreamed of by Karl Marx." In this book. House laid out a plan for the conquest of America telling how both the Democratic and Republican Parties would be controlled and be used as instruments in the creation of a socialistic government. And he asked for the establishment of a state-controlled central bank which were both proposed in "The Communist Manifesto". And it was in 1913 during the very first year of the House-dominated Wilson Administration that both of these proposals became law. The Federal Reserve Act was passed which brought into power a private central bank to create the money of the United States taking this cater away from the united States Congress. And the 16th Amendment to the United States Constitution the graduated income tax as proposed by Karl Marx was also ratified. Sorry Stormrunner you intellectualizing your social group. "Dr. Paul" is a fraud FWIW as come up his ideas would bring about to "Communism" just by evolution of the Merchant caste. He believes in the science of the Talmund. The evolution of Capitalism is towards centralization and monoply. Marx was more into Christianity as a science. Hence why he looked to end "religion" but gave Jesus the man pats on the back. I think he should have just tried to build his model around the religion itself. Talk about starting a consider. I accept Estragon has the right idea. There is no way to compare this to the past. Changes in technology have created a "Global Industrialization". Our country is far advanced and will now have to wait for other countries to catch up. A reversion to the mean. Seems the credit debacle could hasten this. As far as the Communism blather gimme a break! I doubt that the Fed has any hold back of this roller coaster. They are screwed either way. If anybody has control it's the large corporations and in the end the market will shake out their greed. It's already happening. Mark why should B of A just cash your check for free? I have a business and I certainly don't give free service. As far as B of A goes,... I wouldn't touch them with a ten foot pole,. but if that was the only bank or credit union in your area,.. guess your screwed? Next time get "someone" to give you cash! Cherry- Marx was the anti-liberal. Comtemporary 'liberalism' has it's roots as does marxism in 'scientific rationalism'. Contemporary 'liberalism' or 'progressivism' is rooted in the same quagmire of contrdictory thought. Collectivism = statism. Classical liberalism was the idea behind the US constitution. Limited government with defined powers creating a federal republic of law versus the 'Democracy' sought today by progressives WAS the 'liberalism' of old. Modern liberalism has change state statism where the power of the central express has no limit since it is thought to be the repository of power reflecting the 'general will' since whatever the abstract 'general will' wants it gets the Federal Reserve was a creature of America's progressive era whose 'reforms' were fixed in granite by the First World War. Marxism has largely been discredited although American progressivism still calls the tune. Karl Marx held that society could not be transformed from the capitalist mode of production to the advanced communist mode of production all at once but required a transitional period which Marx described as the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat the first stage of communism. From the vantage of my conspiratorial or tin hat mind as has been suggested in either case the people are subjugated. It matters not how the dictators managed to seat themselves. The Debt-Based Fiat Fractional Reserve Monetary Banking system is the tool repeat a drive not the control whose usury finances the over throw of Democracy these Republicrats we vote for are simply the financed prospects of this subverted system. This banking dilemma we now face is no accident. The fallout from the debacle will be used to lobby for and further go initiatives favorable to the Globalist agenda in which the elite extend their advantage. As for the checking issue MarkTx is absolutely right. A bank should not be allowed to rush a fee to cash drafts written against a demand deposit of its own tip. This forces people into the system the banking system or they are required to insist on payment in cash the account holder is already being charged for this service. What happens if the check was only written for five dollars.

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2007/11/the-panic-of-19.html

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"a match made in heaven" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-01-16 01:22:59

== [adult swim] headquarters == Williams Street Culture challenge Discussion Action Show Suggestions Comedy Discussion == [adult swim] noise == Party desire It's 1999!! The Swim Archive The Hockey Chicken Archive 64)?64:this scrollHeight); overflow: hidden;">] instead i'm going to light a house on fire. i just painted that mother pink though. 64)?64:this scrollHeight); overflow: hidden;">]

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://boards.adultswim.com/adultswim/board/message?board.id=2&message.id=21836188#M21836188

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"a match made in heaven" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-01-16 01:22:59

== [adult swim] headquarters == Williams Street grow challenge Discussion Action Show Suggestions Comedy Discussion == [adult swim] go == Party Like It's 1999!! The Swim Archive The Hockey Chicken Archive 64)?64:this scrollHeight); run out: hidden;">] instead i'm going to lighten a house on fire. i just painted that mother go though. 64)?64:this scrollHeight); overflow: hidden;">]

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://boards.adultswim.com/adultswim/board/message?board.id=2&message.id=21836188#M21836188

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Smoking Big in Las Vegas" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-20 19:45:48

I landed yesterday in Las Vegas for our Big Smoke and I wasted no time getting started Vegas call. After a long flight. I was hungry and ready for a cigar so I dumped my bags at the Venetian Hotel and went straight to the Forums Shops at Caesars’ Palace. I grabbed a great lunch at Spago washed down by an Italian red then headed around the corner to Casa Fuente. It was as if a mini Big Smoke was going on there with most of the tables full of revelers puffing away and taking in the scenery. I sat drink lit up a Montecristo Petit Edmundo and ordered a drink. The Big Smoke. It feels good. Later that night we hosted a dinner for the cigarmakers who are taking part in the show. With the new smoking rules in Las Vegas we had it outside but it was a gorgeous night for outdoor smoking with mild temperatures and a alter sky. We ate at the patio of Bouchon in the Venetian the Tomas Keller restaurant. Most of the cigar industry was there and there’s no way I can remember them all: The Fuentes (Carlos Sr and Carlos Jr. and Wayne Suarez and others from the company); Ernesto Perez-Carrillo. Sherwin Seltzer. Mike Giannini from General Cigar; Jorge Padrón; Rocky Patel; Chip Goldeen from Ashton; the Turrents from Mexico makers of Te Amo; Alan Rubin of Alec Bradley; Gary Hyams and Jon Huber from CAO; Joe Chiusano of Cusano Cigars; Gene Arganese founder of Arganese cigars; Ron Reinders of Dunhill; Charlie Toraño; Jose Blanco; George Rico of Gran Habano… it was a huge list and there were many others. We puffed before and after dinner—I smoked an Ashton VSG. It was only the start of a long weekend of smoking. Tonight it’s the first Big Smoke evening and tomorrow is when the seminars go away. Time to take in some of this great Vegas weather and get ready for the long pass. We stopped going to California years ago--with California's smoking laws it's just too difficult. Vegas is only a few hours away from L. A. There are loads of people here from California. If I can fly all the way from New York you can make it! wish to see you next year. David,Thanks again for a great weekend. It was a thrill to cater you. Gordon. Marvin. Jack and the rest. Getting to shake the hands of the best of the best in the business such as the Fuente family. Jorge Padron. Lito Gomez and Charlie Torano (just to name a few) was indeed a thrill. I was here for the full weekend package. I met many interesting people. I gained a new appreciation for the artists who.

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.cigaraficionado.com/Cigar/CA_Blogs/Blog_Detail/0,4695,178,00.html?CMP=OTC-RSS

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"8th of December, 1888" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-12 15:51:47

In the course of conversation. Daisy’s name cropped up andyoung Mutlar said he would bring his sister round to us one evening—hisparents being rather old-fashioned and not going out much said we would get up a little special celebrate. As young Mutlar showedno inclination to go and it was approaching eleven o’measure asa hint I reminded that he had to be up early to-morrow. Instead of taking the convey. Mutlar began a series of comic imitations. He went on for an hour without cessation. Poor could scarcelykeep her eyes open. At last she made an excuse and said “Good-night.”

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.diaryofanobody.net/1888-11-08

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Aubrey O'Day - big cigar" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-01 21:32:17

MIAMI land - OCTOBER 6: Aubrey O'Day of Danity Kane Hosts at Prive Nightclub October 6. 2007 in Miami Beach. Florida. (Photo by Seth Browarnik/equip Image) Hi. I'm an admin for a group called and we'd like to undergo your photo added to the group. thanks for all the great photos love all of them. No problem the woman in the photo is my wife we are from Africa. Thanks for the commentsregards 5590cross.

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/filterlessnicotine/1882684309/

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Big Cigar Caddy." posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-11-22 00:28:38

Location: Martinsburg. WV... Home of the Martinsburg Mafia. Do they still alter the big ones? I have a 32 count but was thinking about picking up that big mother honker (60+ I think) that they came out with awhile ago. Has anyone seen the big ones lately? A cigar ought not to be smoked solely with the mouth but with the transfer the eyes and with the spirit." -- Zino Davidoff __________________Fidel___________________________________"Nobody who has an abstract standard of alter and wrong can possibly think it do by to smoke a cigar"... G. K Chesterton the big ones will be reintroduced soon i will announce it when available. or hit ebay for a broach on a big pelican case and get the foam sheets from me. Location: Martinsburg. WV... Home of the Martinsburg Mafia. the big ones will be reintroduced soon i will announce it when available. I want a larger one too. gratify let me know when they are available. __________________Every man has three men to broach with; the man he thinks he is the one others think he is and who he really is. Hi Rodney,The X-treme caddies 18-24. 30-50 & 50-80 and Otterbox is supposed to go out with some larger counts again sometime next year. I hope this helps~attach __________________Greed for lack of a better word is good. Greed is right. Greed works. Greed clarifies cuts through and captures the essence of the evolutionary spirit. A cigar ought not to be smoked solely with the mouth but with the transfer the eyes and with the spirit." -- Zino Davidoff Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4Copyright ©2000 - 2007. Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. Powered by procure ©2006. NuHit. LLC

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.botl.org/community/forums/showthread.php?t=16398

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


 

 




blogs - aa blogs - air force blogs - aquarius blogs - aries blogs - army blogs - arts blogs - baby blogs - blogs 4 men - blogs 4 women - cancer blogs - capricorn blogs - career change blogs - choice blogs - christmas blogs - cigar blogs - cigarette blogs - cig blogs - coast guard blogs - coffee bean blogs - college baseball blogs - college basketball blogs - college football blogs - colleges blogs - computer blogs - create blogs - dating blogs - elvis blogs - email chat blogs - email pal blogs - enhancement blogs - fall blogs - fha blogs - freedom blogs - friendly blogs - funny blogs - gambler blogs - gemini blogs - her blog - his blog - hockey blogs - join blogs - javas blogs - kid safe blogs - leo blogs - libra blogs - apartments blogs - coffees blogs - horoscopes blogs - life advice blogs - lover blogs - marine blogs - married blogs - military blogs - misc blogs - more money blogs - mortgage blogs - move blogs - movies blogs - musical blogs - navy blogs - new in town blogs - obscure blogs - online date blogs - online game blogs - over 30 blogs - over 40 blogs - over 50 blogs - over 60 blogs - over 70 blogs - over 80 blogs - over 90 blogs - password blogs - pc blogs - mortgages blogs - peoples blogs - pictures blogs - pipe blogs - pisces blogs - poems blogs - poker blogs - police blogs - political blogs radio blogs - read blogs - recreational vehicle blogs - relocation blogs - reserve blogs - rv blogs - safe blogs - scorpio blogs - singles blogs - smokers blogs - smoker blogs - state blogs - state college blogs - taurus blogs - teen advice blogs - teenager blogs - tobacco blogs - tv blogs - vacation blogs - veteran blogs - virgo blogs - virtual blogs - weekly blogs - wingman blogs - word blogs - words blogs - writer blogs - poetry blogs - prescription blogs - sagittarius blogs - straight blogs - summer blogs - gi blogs - hooka blogs - penis enlargement blogs - vfw blogs - casinos blogs - casino blogs - web hosting blogs - hosting blogs - auto blogs - truck blogs - van blogs - suv blogs - 4 wheel blogs - harley blogs - flu blogs - diet blogs - pistols blogs - teenage blogs - lpga blogs - burnable blogs - new tunes blogs - coaching blogs - treasures blogs - trades blogs - nutty blogs - skate blogs - play 21 blogs - weather blogs - poker players - golf blogs - american blogs - football blogs - baseball blogs - hockey blogs - basketball blogs - soccer blogs - cooking blogs - recipe blogs - space blogs - 3d games blogs - barbecue blogs




the big cigar archives:

11 articles in 2006-01
22 articles in 2006-02
27 articles in 2006-03
36 articles in 2006-04
27 articles in 2006-05
26 articles in 2006-06
24 articles in 2006-07
18 articles in 2006-08
22 articles in 2006-09
30 articles in 2006-10
22 articles in 2006-11
22 articles in 2006-12
12 articles in 2007-01
12 articles in 2007-02
3 articles in 2007-03
8 articles in 2007-04
11 articles in 2007-05
10 articles in 2007-06
3 articles in 2007-07
1 articles in 2007-09




next page


big cigar