Business & Finance: Shadow of Panic

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In 1880 Prince & Whitely, Manhattan brokers, opened a branch office in the old Hotel Willard, Washington, D. C., engaged the first private wire from the Capitol to Manhattan. On July 2, 1881, this wire was used to flash word of President James A. Garfield's assassination, giving Prince & Whitely clients an advantageous time margin in the market shock which followed. At that time the firm was three years old. Since then it has survived many a severe depression including at least six actual stockmarket panics. Last week it failed. Almost coincidentally a "New Economic Theory" seemed to sweep the emotions of volatile stock-traders. Though few Wall streeters have ever read Oswald Spengler's Der Untergang des Abendlandcs, it was easy for them to imagine a world in the grip of conditions more awful and appalling than ever before. Prices will never go up again; the world will seethe in war and revolt; all mankind is doomed to a steadily decreasing standard of living until poverty, per-haps starvation, is the rule of life—such talk made spice for bear-food last week.

Since early September stockmarket prices had declined steadily. When the week opened, commentators were already comparing prices with the panic lows of Nov. 13, 1929. Steel drew near to $150 (its 1929 high was $261¾). On Thursday, Stock Exchange President Richard I. Whitney, who on Oct. 24, 1929 had temporarily reversed the market by bidding $205 for Steel when it was at $190, this time was willing to bid the market-price $150. At this figure 25,000 shares were sold in a single $3,000,000 transaction, but even indirect evidence that J. P. Morgan & Co. was buying failed to halt the decline. When Mr. Whitney was obliged to announce the Prince & Whitely failure from the floor of the exchange, many a blue-chip sank below its 1929 bottom. Traders noted these prices:

Low Nov. 13, 1929 Low Oct. 10, 1930

Allied Chemical & Dye 197 200

American Can 86 112¼

American & Foreign Power... 51 37⅝

American Tel. & Tel 197¼ 192¾

Anaconda 70 34¾

Baltimore & Ohio 105* 84 1/2

Consolidated Gas 80¼ 94

E. I. du Pont 90 97⅝

General Electric 168⅛ 52¾

General Motors 36⅛ 35½

Gillette Safety Razor 80 35⅝

International Tel. & Tel 53 25⅛

Kennecott 49⅜ 27

Montgomery Ward 49¼ 21⅝

New York Central 160 139

Pennsylvania 74 64⅞

Radio 28 21½

Standard Oil of N. J 50 55⅛

Texas Corp 50 42⅛

Union Carbide & Carbon 59 61

U. S. Steel 150 144½

Westinghouse Electric 102⅝109¾

Woolworth 52¼ 59⅜

Much of the selling was of course directly attributable to the failure of Prince & Whitely. Liquidation was especially violent in stocks in which Prince & Whitely were supposed to have an interest: Atlas Stores, Brockway Motor Truck, Hahn Department Stores, Kelvinator Corp., National Dairy Products. On the curb, Prince & Whitely Trading Corp. dropped from $7.50 to $.50 before rallying. Brokers pointed to the fact that J. A. Sisto & Co. which failed fortnight ago (TIME. Oct. 13) had had an investment trust, that both Sisto financial and Prince & Whitely trading had been formed near the peak of last year's bull market.

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