Tag Archives: Year Low

The First Cracks Appear in the Dow's Monster Bull Market

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

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On this day in economic and financial history…

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was six months away from an all-time high that wouldn’t be matched again for a generation when the trading of Mar. 26, 1929 revealed a dangerous frothiness in the market. Headlines and subheaders in The New York Times read: “Stocks Crash then Rally in 8,246,740-Share Day,” “Market Sets New Record,” “Stocks Dumped as Loan Rate Mounts, Sending Wide List Down,” “300 Issues at Year’s Low,” and “$13,874,000 Bond Sales Also Biggest for 1929.” For all this volatility, in what was then the most active day in exchange history, the Dow ended up a single point lower than its previous close at 296.51.

The day’s record volume, 1.3 million shares higher than the old record, was a reaction to Federal Reserve warnings that credit issued for market speculation ought to be restricted. This was an evidently sensible policy, as many brokerage firms allowed margins of 25% or lower, even during the worst days of the autumn collapse. However, a junkie can’t quit cold turkey without suffering serious withdrawal, and thousands of levered-up investors were forced into margin calls. The Times wrote:

Stocks dropped like plummets … with no visible signs of support. Thousands of accounts were wiped out in this violent swing and many thousands of speculators, on their own volition and in a stage bordering panic, committed financial hari-kari. Every brokerage house in New York and throughout the country was jammed to the doors with excited customers.

The primitive tickers of the day were not equipped to handle such immense volume, and closing prices from 3 p.m. EDT were not printed out until after 5 p.m. EDT. As much as $400 million in brokers’ loans was estimated to be lost over the previous week’s trading, and a common refrain on Wall Street was “The back of the bull market has been broken.”

It was not quite finished, but the great rise of the Roaring ’20s was nearing its end. The Dow had only 29% more to rise before it peaked in early September of 1929. After the crash was through, it would take a quarter of a century — until 1953 — for the Dow to reach the closing price of March 26, 1929.

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The article The First Cracks Appear in the Dow’s Monster Bull Market originally appeared on Fool.com.

Fool contributor Alex Planes holds no financial position in any company mentioned here. Add him on Google+ or follow him on Twitter @TMFBiggles for more insight into markets, history, …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Jobless Claims Hit 5-Year Low

By Justin Loiseau, The Motley Fool

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Initial jobless claims fell 2.9% to a seasonally adjusted 332,000 for the week ending March 9, according to a Labor Department report released today. After the previous week’s revised 1.4% drop, this latest jobs report marks the third straight week of declines in initial claims. Market analysts had forecast a 2.9% increase.

The real cause for celebration comes from this week’s longer-term look. As declines remain consistent, the four-week moving average crept down to 346,750 to reach its lowest level of the recovery, according to The Wall Street Journal. The AP reports that the four-week average notched its lowest level since the week of  March 8, 2008.

Both the most recent week’s number and the moving average clocked in solidly below 400,000, a cutoff point that economists consider a sign of an improving labor market. This latest news also comes one week after the Labor Department announced an unemployment rate drop to 7.7% for February.

Source: Author, data from Labor Department.

On a state-by-state basis, Massachusetts and North Carolina led the drop in initial claims for the week ended March 2 (most recent available data). Both states cited fewer layoffs in the transportation industry as one of the primary reasons for their respective 4,190- and 1,150-claim dips. After California’s initial claims fell a whopping 40,350 the previous week, the Golden State in the most recent jobs report registered the largest week-to-week increase in initial claims (11,720), due primarily to service sector layoffs.

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The article Jobless Claims Hit 5-Year Low originally appeared on Fool.com.

Y
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Jobless Claims Fall To Near 5-Year Low

By Reuters

jobless claims fall to near 5-year low

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WASHINGTON — The number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits fell last week and a trend reading hit a near five-year low, pointing to ongoing healing in the labor market.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped by 5,000 to a seasonally adjusted 366,000, the Labor Department said on Thursday. The prior week’s claims figure was revised to show 3,000 more new claims than initially reported.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected 360,000 claims last week.

Claims…

Jobless Claims Fall To Near 5-Year Low originally appeared on DailyFinance.com on 2013-02-07T09:45:00Z.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance