Sunday, July 15, 2012

HISTORY OF MARKET CRASH


HISTORY OF MARKET CRASH

INTRODUCTION
Market crash refers to a sudden dramatic decline of stock prices resulting in a significant loss of paper wealth.  Crashes are usually driven by underlying economic factors and panic.  The two well-known flavors of market crashes are the ‘corrections’ which is caused by sudden onset of panic but tends to be short-lived; and the ‘depression’ which is the more dangerous type.
Stock market bubble is often caused the market crash where it is a type of economic bubble that takes place in stock markets when market participants drive stock prices above their value in relation to some system of stock valuation.  Stock market bubbles frequently produce hot markets in Initial Public Offerings (IPO), since this is where the investment bankers and their clients see opportunities to float new stock issues at inflated prices.

CRASHES AND BUBBLES
BUBBLES
Bubbles occur when too much demand is being put on a stock and it drives the price of the stock beyond any accurate or rational reflection of its actual worth.  Like a soap bubble, investing bubbles appear as though it will rise forever, but eventually they will pop.  So, when it does pop, so the money invested dissipates into the wind.A bubble is a type of investing phenomenon that demonstrates the frailty of some facets of human emotion.  Like the soap bubbles a child likes to blow, since they are not formed from anything substantial, they eventually pop.
CRASHES
A significant drop in the total value of a market, attributed by the popping of a bubble, which then create a situation of investors fleeing the market and at the same time causing massive losses is known as the crash.  Panic selling by investors worsens the situation which eventually affects everyone and worse still, followed by a depression.
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN BUBBLE AND CRASH
The relationship between the bubbles and crashes is best describe as the relationship between clouds and rain where bubbles are like clouds and market crashes are like the rain.  You can have clouds without rain but you can’t have rain without clouds.  Market crash almost always triggered from a bubble.  The thicker the clouds, the harder its rains.

CRASHES AND BUBBLES THROUGHOUT HISTORY
The Tulip and Bulb Craze (1634 – 1637: Holland)
In 1593 tulips were brought from Turkey and introduced to the Dutch.  A man named Conrad Guestner imported the first tulip bulb into Holland from Constantinople, now known as Turkey.  Tulip bulbs became a status symbol and a novelty for the rich and famous.  It was widely sought and fairly priced.  The tulips contracted a non-fatal virus known as mosaic, which caused ‘flames’ of color in a wide variety to appear upon the petals.  These increased the rarity of an already unique flower which than cause the rise in the price of the tulips, valued according to their uniqueness, or desired.  Prices rose so fast and high that people were trading their land, life savings, and anything else they could liquidate to get more tulip bulbs.  The prices do not give an accurate reflection of the value of a tulip bulb.  The tulip was said to be a conspirator in the supply squeeze as it actually takes seven years to grow one from seed.  Some prudent investors decided to sell and crystallize their profits thus causing a domino effect.  People began to panic and sell regardless of losses as the price began to dive lower.  They began to realize that they had traded their homes for a piece of greenery.

The government attempted to honor contracts at 10% of the face value but the market plunged even lower.  Assembled deputies of Amsterdam nullified all of the contracts purchased at the height of the mania and supreme judges of Amsterdam declared all tulip speculation to be gambling, thus refused to honor these contracts.  As a result, payments were not enforced by any of Holland’s courts. This action further fueled the market crash.  The effects of the tulip craze left the Dutch very hesitant about speculative investments for quite some time.  The lesson learned was that it is better to stop and just smell the flowers than to stake your future upon one.  The amount at the peak is where a single tulip could be traded for an entire estate; and at the bottom is one tulip was at the price of a common onion.

The South Sea Bubble (1711: United Kingdom)
The British Empire was the big dog on the block in the 1700s meaning the population had money to invest.  The eighteenth century was a time of prosperity whereby a large section of the population had money to invest.  So, when the South Sea Company (SSC) had an IOU to the government worth £10,000,000.00, they purchased the ‘rights’ to all trade in the South Seas, thus had no problem in attracting investors.  The SSC was at that time perceived to be the most lucrative monopoly on earth.  When SSC repeatedly re-issues stocks, people just bought, nobody asked questions.
The emergence of the Mississippi Company (MC), a company established in France, the brainchild of an exiled Brit named John Law switching the monetary system from gold and silver into a paper currency system.  Soon the MC's stock was worth 80 times more than all the gold and silver in France.  This success stirred British pride, thus blinding them to many indications of poor management in SSC.  In 1720, the SSC’s management team sold their stocks after realizing that the value of the shares was not reflecting the actual value of the company.  The leak of the sales caused the panic selling of worthless certificates.  This causes a huge hole in the south sea bubble and it also punctured the MC's unrealistic value and both companies came crashing down.  The amount at the peak was traded for 1,000 British pounds; and was reduced to nothing by the latter half of 1720.

The Florida Real Estate Craze (1926: Florida)
Florida was the popular U.S. destination/residence in 1920 for people who don't like the cold.  Prices of houses doubled and tripled in some cases due to demand.  This situation attracts speculators so much so people began pumping huge amounts of money into the real estate market.  However, as time goes, there were no ‘greater fools’ to buy the disgustingly overpriced land, thus forcing the prices to adjust ever so subtly.  As soon as the speculators realized this, they began to sell their properties to solidify their profits while they could.  Then everybody simultaneously saw it and panic selling ensued.  Imagine the situation where there are thousands of sellers and very few buyers, prices of real estate came down with a sickening thud, twitched a bit, and then crawled down even lower.  At the peak, land bought for $800,000, can within a year could be sold for $4 million before crashing back down.

The Great Depression (October, 1929: USA)
Despite the Florida crash, the stock market was guaranteed to make everyone rich as the First World War had been won, and industrialization was resulting in previously-unimaginable luxuries.  The stock market was believed to be a no-risk and no-brain world where everything went up.  People start pouring all their savings into stock market without really learning about the system or the underlying companies.  With the flood of uneducated investors, the market was ripe for some manipulation and swindling.  There exist opportunities for investment bankers, brokers, traders, and sometimes owners banded together to manipulate stock prices to obtain gains.  The intention was to get the public to notice the progression of price on the ticker tape, so that everyone would buy the stock.  Thus the market manipulators would sell off their overpriced shares for a healthy profit.
Behavioral finance shows that the less an investor knows, the easier it is for them to be swept up in popular opinion (herd mentality). Little known to the investors, this behavior is a double-edged sword to them because the ignorant are also easily spooked into panic, thus causing the trampling of the market.  The stock market drop more than 40% from the beginning of September 1929 to the end of October 1929, and continues to decline until July 1932 nearly 90% from its 1929 highs.

The Crash of 1987 (19 October, 1987: USA)
The Crash of 1987 was the crash that everyone expected but could not justify.  The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) could take investors to the proper information but they couldn't make them think.  Investors did not look at the value of the company but at the appeal of its public image and the vernacular used to describe it.  Market continued to rise unabated due to SEC unable to halt the shady IPOs and conglomerations.
Early 1987, there was a rash of SEC investigations into insider trading which rattled investors.  They then decided to move into the more stable environment offered by bonds or, in some cases, junk bonds.  The mass exodus out of the market caused the computer programs began to kick in which put a stop loss on stocks and sent a sell order to the NYSE computer system, DOT (designated order turnaround).  The transmission of instantaneous many sell orders are too overwhelming for the DOT printers causing the whole market system to lag, leaving investors on every level (institutional to individual) effectively blind.  This caused panic and thus people started dumping their stock in the dark without knowing what their losses were or whether their orders would execute fast enough to keep up with plummeting prices.  The largest one-day percentage drop in history that is 508.32 points, 22.6%, or $500 billion lost in one day.

The Asian Crisis (1989: Southeast Asia, primarily Japan)
The Japanese economy gained extreme strength after its long recovery from the war and the atomic bombs making the Asian economy an alternative for investors who were recently bruised by 1987.  Although some have realized that Japan was becoming a bubble but the high level of collusion between the government and business was believed to be able to sustain the growth forever.  Land prices in Japan appreciated by 70 times and stocks increased 100 times over between the year 1955 and 1990.  The crisis started when landowning firms started using the book value of their land to buy stocks which in turn was used to finance the purchase of American assets.  Soon corruptions began to spread throughout the political and business realms in Japan.  Japan’s government strategy then was to raise interest rates in order to put a halt to the inflammatory growth of stocks and real estate.  But the strategy backfired when the Nikkei index plunged down to more than 30 000 points.  Percentage of 63.5% as of 2003.

The Dotcom Crash (March 11, 2000 to October 9, 2002: Silicon Valley)
The internet started to catch on in 1995 with an estimation of 18 million users all over the world.  Speculators were barely able to control their excitement over the untapped market of the ‘new economy’.  Soon words like networking, new paradigm, information technologies, internet, consumer-driven navigation, tailored web experience, and many more filled the media and investors with a rabid that hunger for more.  The IPOs of internet companies emerged with much ferocity and frequency making investors grabbing blindly at every new issue without even looking at the business plan to find out how long the company would take before making a profit.
The first shots through this bubble came when the companies themselves reported huge losses and some even folded outright within months of their offering.  There were 457 IPOs in the year 1999, where most were internet and technology related companies.  Only 117 doubled in price on the first day of trading.  The Nasdaq Composite fell from 5046.86 to 1114.11 thus losing 78% of its value.

Housing Bubble and Credit Crisis (2007-2009)
For several years, global financial markets entered a period of ‘Great Moderation’ due to the above-average returns and below-average volatility of by a wide variety of asset classes.  Rising home prices led to rampant real estate speculation, and fueled excessive consumer spending.  As home prices soared and many homeowners ‘stretched’ their mortgage payments.  The possibility of a collapse and the true extent of the danger were hidden because the mortgages were turned into AAA-rated securities.
When home prices started to plunged, it prompting large losses for banks and other financial institutions which then spread to other asset classes.  Events reached their climax with the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.  The aggressive actions by governments around the world eventually helped avoid financial collapse, but the credit freeze forced the global economy into the worst recession since WW2.  The S&P 500 declined 57% from its high in October 2007 of 1576 to its low in March 2009 of 676.

CONCLUSION
People create most of the risk in the market place by inflating stock prices beyond the value of the underlying company.  Most market volatility is our entire fault.  The unreasonable belief in the possibility of getting rich quick is the primary reason people get burned by market crashes.  Investing in high potential investments for returns means investors must also be willing to bear a high chance of losing it all.  The best thing is be educated, informed, and well-practiced in doing research.
Be alert when suddenly stocks are flying through the stratosphere like rockets, because it is usually a sign of a bubble.  Stocks can legitimately enjoy a huge leap in value, but this leap should be justified by the prospects of the underlying companies, not just by a mass of investors following each other.  The unreasonable belief in the possibility of getting rich quick is the primary reason people get burned by market crashes.  Remember that high potential returns for investments bear a high chance of loss.
The stock markets are primarily a mechanism for the redistribution of wealth.  It is a gambling game on the table of a game of chance.  It was observed that the time between crashes has decreased.  Greed is a human characteristic, and it will not go away so easily.  The one lesson learned from all of these crashes is that humans may overact frequently with small effects, but computers do it only once in a big way.  History is a great teacher, people just never learn from it!  It was said that those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it.

REFERENCES
http://news.bbc.co.uk/, Market Crashes Through The Ages by James Arnold, BBC News Online (12 February 2003)
http://worlds-financial-markets.blogspot.com/2007/05/financial-crisis-history-tulip-bulb.html, Financial Crisis History (Tulip Bulb Mania); Wednesday, May 16, 2007
http://www.investopedia.com/features/crashes, Market Crashes by Andrew Beattie
http://www.prepareandprosper.net/a-tulip-is-just-a-tulip-isnt-it/, A Tulip Is Just A Tulip, Isn’t It?; April 21, 2011 By J.F. Sebasti
http://www.prepareandprosper.net/market-crashes-the-south-sea-bubble/, Market Crashes: The South Sea Bubble; May 12, 2011 By Joseph Gitter
http://www.prepareandprosper.net/what_are_crashes_and_bubbles/, Market Crashes: What are Crashes and Bubbles?; May 6, 2011 By J.F. Sebastian
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article18.html, House Prices - Tulip Mania - A lesson from History!; By: Sarah_Jones, Sep 14, 2005
http://www.thewealthwisher.com/2010/07/21/market-crashes-the-tulip-and-bulb-mania/, Stock Market Crashes : The Tulip and Bulb Mania; By Radhey Sharma, on July 21st, 2010

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