fbpx
Wikipedia

Panic of 1907

The Panic of 1907, also known as the 1907 Bankers' Panic or Knickerbocker Crisis,[1] was a financial crisis that took place in the United States over a three-week period starting in mid-October, when the New York Stock Exchange suddenly fell almost 50% from its peak the previous year. The panic occurred during a time of economic recession, and there were numerous runs affecting banks and trust companies. The 1907 panic eventually spread throughout the nation when many state and local banks and businesses entered bankruptcy. The primary causes of the run included a retraction of market liquidity by a number of New York City banks and a loss of confidence among depositors, exacerbated by unregulated side bets at bucket shops.[2]

Wall Street during the bank panic in October 1907. Federal Hall National Memorial, with its statue of George Washington, is seen on the right.

The panic was triggered by the failed attempt in October 1907 to corner the market on stock of the United Copper Company. When the bid failed, banks that had lent money to the cornering scheme suffered runs that later spread to affiliated banks and trusts, leading a week later to the downfall of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, New York City's third-largest trust. The collapse of the Knickerbocker spread fear throughout the city's trusts as regional banks withdrew reserves from New York City banks. The panic then extended across the nation as vast numbers of people withdrew deposits from their regional banks, causing the 8th-largest decline in U.S. stock market history.[3]

The panic might have deepened if not for the intervention of financier J. P. Morgan,[4] who pledged large sums of his own money and convinced other New York bankers to do the same to shore up the banking system. That highlighted the limitations of the US Independent Treasury system, which managed the nation's money supply but was unable to inject sufficient liquidity back into the market. By November, the financial contagion had largely ended, only to be replaced by a further crisis due to the heavy borrowing of a large brokerage firm using the stock of Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company (TC&I) as collateral. Collapse of TC&I's stock price was averted by an emergency takeover by Morgan's U.S. Steel Corporation, a move approved by the trust-busting President Theodore Roosevelt. The following year, Senator Nelson W. Aldrich, a leading Republican, established and chaired a commission to investigate the crisis and propose future solutions, which led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System.[5][6]

Economic conditions edit

 
Dow Jones Industrial Average 1904–1910. The bottom of 53 was recorded November 15, 1907.

When United States President Andrew Jackson allowed the charter of the Second Bank of the United States to expire in 1836, the U.S. was without any sort of central bank, and the money supply in New York City fluctuated with the country's annual agricultural cycle. Each autumn money flowed out of the city as harvests were purchased and—in an effort to attract money back—interest rates were raised. Foreign investors then sent their money to New York to take advantage of the higher rates.[7] From the January 1906 Dow Jones Industrial Average high of 103, the market began a modest correction that would continue throughout the year. The April 1906 earthquake that devastated San Francisco contributed to the market instability, prompting an even greater flood of money from New York to San Francisco to aid reconstruction.[8][9] A further stress on the money supply occurred in late 1906, when the Bank of England raised its interest rates, partly in response to UK insurance companies paying out so much to US policyholders, and more funds remained in London than expected.[10] From their peak in January, stock prices declined 18% by July 1906. By late September, stocks had recovered about half of their losses.

The Hepburn Act, which gave the Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) the power to set maximum railroad rates, became law in July 1906.[11] This depreciated the value of railroad securities.[12] Between September 1906 and March 1907, the stock market slid, losing 7.7% of its capitalization.[13] Between March 9 and 26, stocks fell a further 9.8%.[14] (This March collapse is sometimes referred to as a "rich man's panic".)[15] The economy remained volatile through the summer. A number of shocks hit the system: the stock of Union Pacific—among the most common stocks used as collateral—fell 50 points; that June an offering of New York City bonds failed; in July the copper market collapsed; in August the Standard Oil Company was fined $29 million for antitrust violations.[15] In the first nine months of 1907, stocks were lower by 24.4%.[16]

On July 27, The Commercial & Financial Chronicle noted that "the market keeps unstable ... no sooner are these signs of new life in evidence than something like a suggestion of a new outflow of gold to Paris sends a tremble all through the list, and the gain in values and hope is gone".[17] Several bank runs occurred outside the US in 1907: in Egypt in April and May; in Japan in May and June; in Hamburg and Chile in early October.[11] The fall season was always a vulnerable time for the banking system—combined with the roiled stock market, even a small shock could have grave repercussions.[10]

The panic edit

Cornering United Copper edit

The 1907 panic began with a stock manipulation scheme to corner the market in F. Augustus Heinze's United Copper Company. Heinze had made a fortune as a copper magnate in Butte, Montana. In 1906 he moved to New York City, where he formed a close relationship with notorious Wall Street banker Charles W. Morse. Morse had once successfully cornered New York City's ice market, and together with Heinze gained control of many banks—the pair served on the boards of at least six national banks, ten state banks, five trust companies and four insurance firms.[18]

 
The curb outside the New York Stock Exchange's building, where panic began.[n 1]

Augustus' brother, Otto, devised the scheme to corner United Copper, believing that the Heinze family already controlled a majority of the company. He also believed that a significant number of the Heinze's shares had been borrowed, and sold short, by speculators betting that the stock price would drop, and that they could thus repurchase the borrowed shares cheaply, pocketing the difference. Otto proposed a short squeeze, in which the Heinzes would aggressively purchase as many remaining shares as possible, and then force the short sellers to pay for their borrowed shares. The aggressive purchasing would drive up the share price, and, being unable to find shares elsewhere, the short sellers would have no option but to turn to the Heinzes, who could then name their price.[19]

To finance the scheme, Otto, Augustus and Charles Morse met with Charles T. Barney, president of the city's third-largest trust, the Knickerbocker Trust Company. Barney had provided financing for previous Morse schemes. Morse, however, cautioned Otto that in order to attempt the squeeze, Otto needed much more money than Barney had, and Barney declined to provide funding.[20] Otto decided to attempt the corner anyway. On Monday, October 14, he began aggressively purchasing shares of United Copper, which rose in one day from $39 to $52 per share. On Tuesday (Oct. 15), he issued the call for short sellers to return the borrowed stock. The share price rose to nearly $60, but the short sellers were able to find plenty of United Copper shares from sources other than the Heinzes. Otto had misread the market, and the share price of United Copper began to collapse.[21]

The stock closed at $30 on Tuesday and fell to $10 by Wednesday (Oct. 16). Otto Heinze was ruined. The stock of United Copper was traded outside the hall of the New York Stock Exchange, literally an outdoor market "on the curb" (this curb market would later become the American Stock Exchange). After the crash, The Wall Street Journal reported, "Never has there been such wild scenes on the Curb, so say the oldest veterans of the outside market".[22]

Contagion spreads edit

The failure of the corner left Otto unable to meet his obligations and sent his brokerage house, Gross & Kleeberg, into bankruptcy. On Thursday, October 17, the New York Stock Exchange suspended Otto's trading privileges. As a result of United Copper's collapse, the State Savings Bank of Butte Montana (owned by F. Augustus Heinze) announced its insolvency. The Montana bank had held United Copper stock as collateral against some of its lending and had been a correspondent bank for the Mercantile National Bank in New York City, of which F. Augustus Heinze was then president.

F. Augustus Heinze's association with the corner and the insolvent State Savings Bank proved too much for the board of the Mercantile to accept. Although they forced him to resign before lunch time,[23] by then it was too late. As news of the collapse spread, depositors rushed en masse to withdraw money from the Mercantile National Bank. The Mercantile had enough capital to withstand a few days of withdrawals, but depositors began to pull cash from the banks of the Heinzes' associate Charles W. Morse. Runs occurred at Morse's National Bank of North America and the New Amsterdam National. Afraid of the impact the tainted reputations of Augustus Heinze and Morse could have on the banking system, the New York Clearing House (a consortium of the city's banks) forced Morse and Heinze to resign all banking interests.[24] By the weekend after the failed corner, there was not yet systemic panic. Funds were withdrawn from Heinze-associated banks, only to be deposited with other banks in the city.[25]

A week later many regional stock exchanges throughout the nation were closing or limiting trading. For example, the Pittsburgh city's stock exchange closed for three months starting on October 23, 1907.[26]

Panic hits the trusts edit

 
Headquarters of the Knickerbocker Trust Company at the northwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th Street

In the early 1900s, trust companies were booming; in the decade before 1907, their assets had grown by 244%. During the same period, national bank assets grew by 97%, while state banks in New York increased by 82%.[27] The leaders of the high-flying trusts were mainly prominent members of New York's financial and social circles. One of the most respected was Charles T. Barney, whose late father-in-law William Collins Whitney was a famous financier. Barney's Knickerbocker Trust Company was the third-largest trust in New York.[28]

Because of past association with Charles W. Morse and F. Augustus Heinze, on Monday, October 21, the board of the Knickerbocker asked that Barney resign (depositors may have first begun to pull deposits from the Knickerbocker on October 18, prompting the concern).[25] That day, the National Bank of Commerce where J.P. Morgan was a dominant factor, announced it would not serve as clearing house for the Knickerbocker. On October 22, the Knickerbocker faced a classic bank run. From the bank's opening, the crowd grew. As The New York Times reported, "as fast as a depositor went out of the place ten people and more came asking for their money [and the police] were asked to send some men to keep order".[29] Two van loads of notes were quickly unloaded, yet even this failed to calm the panic stricken depositors. Directors and other officials of the Trust forced their way through the crowd, assuring them that everyone would be paid.[30] In less than three hours, $8 million was withdrawn from the Knickerbocker. Shortly after noon it was forced to suspend operations.[25]

As news spread, other banks and trust companies were reluctant to lend any money. The interest rates on loans to brokers at the stock exchange soared to 70% and, with brokers unable to get money, stock prices fell to a low not seen since December 1900.[31] The panic quickly spread to two other large trusts, Trust Company of America and Lincoln Trust Company. By Thursday, October 24, a chain of failures littered the street: Twelfth Ward Bank, Empire City Savings Bank, Hamilton Bank of New York, First National Bank of Brooklyn, International Trust Company of New York, Williamsburg Trust Company of Brooklyn, Borough Bank of Brooklyn, Jenkins Trust Company of Brooklyn and the Union Trust Company of Providence.[32]

J. P. Morgan edit

 
J.P. Morgan, the dominant banker in New York City.[n 2]

When the chaos began to shake the confidence of New York's banks, the city's most famous banker was out of town. J. P. Morgan, the eponymous president of J.P. Morgan & Co., was attending a church convention in Richmond, Virginia. Morgan was not only the city's wealthiest and most well-connected banker, but he had experience with other similar financial crises—he had helped rescue the U.S. Treasury during the Panic of 1893. As news of the crisis gathered, Morgan returned to Wall Street from his convention late on the night of Saturday, October 19. The following morning, the library of Morgan's brownstone at Madison Avenue and 36th St. had become a revolving door of New York City bank and trust company presidents arriving to share information about (and seek help surviving) the impending crisis.[33][34]

Morgan and his associates examined the books of the Knickerbocker Trust and decided it was insolvent, so they did not intervene to stop the run. Its failure, however, triggered runs on even healthy trusts, prompting Morgan to take charge of the rescue operation. On the afternoon of Tuesday, October 22, the president of the Trust Company of America asked Morgan for assistance. That evening Morgan conferred with George F. Baker, the president of First National Bank, James Stillman of the National City Bank of New York (the ancestor of Citibank), and the United States Secretary of the Treasury, George B. Cortelyou. Cortelyou said that he was ready to deposit government money in the banks to help shore up their deposits. After an overnight audit of the Trust Company of America showed the institution to be sound, on Wednesday afternoon Morgan declared, "This is the place to stop the trouble, then."[35]

As a run began on the Trust Company of America, Morgan worked with Stillman and Baker to liquidate the company's assets to allow the bank to pay depositors. The bank survived to the close of business, but Morgan knew that additional money would be needed to keep it solvent through the following day. That night he assembled the presidents of the other trust companies and held them in a meeting until midnight, when they agreed to provide loans of $8.25 million to allow the Trust Company of America to stay open the next day.[36] On Thursday morning Cortelyou deposited around $25 million into a number of New York banks.[37] John D. Rockefeller, the wealthiest man in the United States, deposited a further $10 million in Stillman's National City Bank.[37] Rockefeller's massive deposit left the National City Bank with the deepest reserves of any bank in the city. To instill public confidence, Rockefeller phoned Melville Stone, the manager of the Associated Press, and told him that he would pledge half of his wealth to maintain U.S. credit.[38]

Stock exchange nears collapse edit

 
Floor of the New York Stock Exchange (pictured in 1908)[n 3]

Despite the infusion of cash, the banks of New York were reluctant to make the short-term loans they typically provided to facilitate daily stock trades. Prices on the exchange began to crash, owing to the lack of funds to finance purchases. At 1:30 p.m. Thursday, October 24, Ransom Thomas, the president of the New York Stock Exchange, rushed to Morgan's offices to tell him that he would have to close the exchange early. Morgan was emphatic that an early close of the exchange would be catastrophic.[39][40]

Morgan summoned the presidents of the city's banks to his office. They started to arrive at 2 p.m.; Morgan informed them that as many as 50 stock exchange houses would fail unless $25 million was raised in 10 minutes. By 2:16 p.m., 14 bank presidents had pledged $23.6 million to keep the stock exchange afloat. The money reached the market at 2:30 p.m., in time to finish the day's trading, and by the 3 o'clock market close, $19 million had been loaned out. Disaster was averted. Morgan usually eschewed the press, but as he left his offices that night he made a statement to reporters: "If people will keep their money in the banks, everything will be all right".[41]

Friday, however, saw more panic on the exchange. Morgan again approached the bank presidents, but this time was only able to convince them to pledge $9.7 million. In order for this money to keep the exchange open, Morgan decided the money could not be used for margin sales. The volume of trading on Friday was 2/3 that of Thursday. The markets again narrowly made it to the closing bell.[42]

Crisis of confidence edit

 
 
 
 
John D. Rockefeller, George B. Cortelyou, Lord Rothschild and James Stillman, some of the best-known names on Wall Street. They tried to restore confidence in the economy.

Morgan, Stillman, Baker and the other city bankers were unable to pool money indefinitely. Even the U.S. Treasury was low on funds. Public confidence needed to be restored, and on Friday evening the bankers formed two committees—one to persuade the clergy to calm their congregations on Sunday, and a second to explain to the press the various aspects of the financial rescue package. Europe's most famous banker, Lord Rothschild, sent word of his "admiration and respect" for Morgan.[43] In an attempt to gather confidence, the Treasury Secretary Cortelyou agreed that if he returned to Washington it would send a signal to Wall Street that the worst had passed.[44][45]

To ensure a free flow of funds on Monday, the New York Clearing House issued $100 million in loan certificates to be traded between banks to settle balances, allowing them to retain cash reserves for depositors.[46] Reassured both by the clergy and the newspapers, and with bank balance sheets flush with cash, a sense of order returned to New York that Monday.[47]

Unbeknownst to Wall Street, a new crisis was being averted in the background. On Sunday, Morgan's associate, George Perkins, was informed that the City of New York required at least $20 million by November 1 or it would go bankrupt. The city tried to raise money through a standard bond issue, but failed to gather enough financing. On Monday and again on Tuesday, New York Mayor George McClellan approached Morgan for assistance. In an effort to avoid the disastrous signal that a New York City bankruptcy would send, Morgan contracted to purchase $30 million worth of city bonds.[48][45]

Drama at the library edit

Although calm was largely restored in New York by Saturday, November 2, yet another crisis loomed. One of the exchange's largest brokerage firms, Moore & Schley, was heavily in debt and in danger of collapse. The firm had borrowed heavily, using shares of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company (TC&I) as collateral. With the value of the thinly traded stock under pressure, many banks would likely call the loans of Moore & Schley on Monday and force an en masse liquidation of the firm's stock. If that occurred it would send TC&I shares plummeting, devastating Moore and Schley and triggering further panic in the market.[49]

To avert the collapse of Moore & Schley, Morgan called an emergency conference at his library Saturday morning. A proposal was made that the U.S. Steel Corporation, a company Morgan had helped form through the merger of the steel companies of Andrew Carnegie and Elbert Gary, would acquire TC&I. This would effectively save Moore & Schley and avert the crisis. The executives and board of U.S. Steel studied the situation and offered to either loan Moore & Schley $5 million, or buy TC&I for $90 a share. By 7 p.m. an agreement had not been reached and the meeting adjourned.[50]

By then, Morgan was drawn into another situation. There was deep concern that the Trust Company of America and the Lincoln Trust might fail to open on Monday due to continuing runs by depositors. On Saturday evening 40–50 bankers gathered at the library to discuss the crisis, with the clearing-house bank presidents in the East room and the trust company executives in the West room. Morgan and those dealing with the Moore & Schley situation moved to the librarian's office. There Morgan told his counselors that he would agree to help shore up Moore & Schley only if the trust companies would work together to bail out their weakest brethren.[51] The discussion among the bankers continued late into Saturday night but without much progress. Around midnight, J. P. Morgan informed a leader of the trust company presidents that keeping Moore & Schley afloat would require $25 million, and he would not commit those funds unless the problems with the trust companies could also be resolved. The trust company executives understood they would not receive further help from Morgan; they would have to finance any bailout of the two struggling trust companies.

At 3 a.m. about 120 bank and trust company officials assembled to hear a full report on the status of the failing trust companies. While the Trust Company of America was barely solvent, the Lincoln Trust Company was probably $1 million short of what it needed to cover depositor accounts. As discussion ensued, the bankers realized that Morgan had locked them in the library and pocketed the key to force a solution,[52] the sort of strong-arm tactic he had been known to use in the past.[53] Morgan then entered the talks and advised the trust companies that they must provide a loan of $25 million to save the weaker institutions. The trust presidents were still reluctant to act, but Morgan informed them that if they did not it would lead to a complete collapse of the banking system. Through his considerable influence, at about 4:45 a.m. he persuaded the unofficial leader of the trust companies to sign the agreement, and the remainder of the bankers followed.[53] Having received these commitments, Morgan allowed the bankers to go home.[54]

 
Cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt attacking Wall Street[n 4]

On Sunday afternoon and into the evening, Morgan, Perkins, Baker and Stillman, along with U.S. Steel's Gary and Henry Clay Frick, worked at the library to finalize the deal for U.S. Steel to buy TC&I and by Sunday night had a plan for acquisition. But one obstacle remained: the anti-trust crusading President Theodore Roosevelt, who had made breaking up monopolies a focus of his presidency.[55]

Frick and Gary traveled overnight by train to the White House to implore Roosevelt to set aside the application of the Sherman Antitrust Act and allow—before the market opened—a company that already held a 60% share of the steel market to make a large acquisition. Roosevelt's secretary refused to see them, but Frick and Gary convinced James Rudolph Garfield, the Secretary of the Interior, to bypass the secretary and arrange a meeting with the president. With less than an hour before the Stock Exchange opened, Roosevelt and Secretary of State Elihu Root began to review the proposed takeover and appreciate the crash likely to ensue if the merger was not approved.[56][57] Roosevelt relented; he later recalled of the meeting, "It was necessary for me to decide on the instant before the Stock Exchange opened, for the situation in New York was such that any hour might be vital. I do not believe that anyone could justly criticize me for saying that I would not feel like objecting to the purchase under those circumstances".[56] When news reached New York, confidence soared. The Commercial & Financial Chronicle reported that "the relief furnished by this transaction was instant and far-reaching".[58] The final crisis of the panic had been averted.[59]

Aftermath edit

The panic of 1907 occurred during a lengthy economic contraction, measured by the National Bureau of Economic Research as occurring between May 1907 and June 1908.[60][61] The interrelated contraction, bank panic, and falling stock market resulted in significant economic disruption. Industrial production dropped further than after any previous bank run, and 1907 saw the second-highest volume of bankruptcies to that date. Production fell by 11% and imports by 26%, while unemployment rose to 8% from under 3%. Immigration dropped to 750,000 people in 1909, from 1.2 million two years earlier.[62]

Since the end of the Civil War, the United States had experienced panics of varying severity. Economists Charles Calomiris and Gary Gorton rate the worst panics as those leading to widespread bank suspensions: the panics of 1873, 1893, and 1907, and a suspension in 1914. Widespread suspensions were forestalled through coordinated actions during the 1884 and 1890 panics. A bank crisis in 1896, in which there was a perceived need for coordination, is also sometimes classified as a panic.[61]

The frequency of crises and the severity of the 1907 panic added to concern about the outsized role of J.P. Morgan and renewed impetus toward a national debate on reform.[63] In May 1908, Congress passed the Aldrich–Vreeland Act, which established the National Monetary Commission to investigate the panic and to propose legislation to regulate banking.[64]

Central bank edit

A significant difference between the European and U.S. banking systems was the absence of a central bank in the United States. European states were able to extend the supply of money during periods of low cash reserves. The belief that the U.S. economy was vulnerable without a central bank was not new. Early in 1907, banker Jacob Schiff of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. warned in a speech to the New York Chamber of Commerce that "unless we have a central bank with adequate control of credit resources, this country is going to undergo the most severe and far reaching money panic in its history".[65]

In 1908: Frank A. Vanderlip led a U.S. business delegation to Japan to meet with Japanese financial leaders including Taka Kawada, Shibusawa Eiichi and his son Shibusawa Masao, also founding members of Mitsui & Co., Takuma Dan & Takamine Mitsui with the goal allying with the Japan to resolve the Panic of 1907 and the unstable U.S. Stock Market.[66]

Aldrich convened a secret conference with a number of the nation's leading financiers at the Jekyll Island Club, off the coast of Georgia, to discuss monetary policy and the banking system in November 1910. Aldrich and A. P. Andrew (Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Department), Paul Warburg (representing Kuhn, Loeb & Co.), Frank A. Vanderlip (James Stillman's successor as president of the National City Bank of New York), Henry P. Davison (senior partner of J. P. Morgan Company), Charles D. Norton (president of the Morgan-dominated First National Bank of New York), and Benjamin Strong (representing J. P. Morgan), produced a design for a "National Reserve Bank".[67]

The final report of the National Monetary Commission was published on January 11, 1911. For nearly two years legislators debated the proposal, and it was not until December 23, 1913, that Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act. President Woodrow Wilson signed the legislation immediately, and the legislation was enacted on the same day, December 23, 1913, creating the Federal Reserve System.[68] Charles Hamlin became the Fed's first chairman, and none other than Morgan's deputy Benjamin Strong became president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the most important regional bank, with a permanent seat on the Federal Open Market Committee.[68]

Pujo Committee edit

 
Cartoon of J. P. Morgan seizing control of banks.[n 5]

Although Morgan was briefly seen as a hero, widespread fears concerning plutocracy and concentrated wealth soon eroded this view. Morgan's bank had survived, but the trust companies that were a growing rival to traditional banks were badly damaged. Some analysts believed that the panic had been engineered to damage confidence in trust companies so that banks would benefit.[69][70] Others believed Morgan took advantage of the panic to allow his U.S. Steel company to acquire TC&I.[71] Although Morgan lost $21 million in the panic, and the significance of the role he played in staving off worse disaster is undisputed, he also became the focus of intense scrutiny and criticism.[57][72][73]

The chair of the House Committee on Banking and Currency, Representative Arsène Pujo (DLa. 7th), convened a special committee to investigate a "money trust", the de facto monopoly of Morgan and New York's other most powerful bankers. The committee issued a scathing report on the banking trade and found that the officers of J. P. Morgan & Co. also sat on the boards of directors of 112 corporations with a market capitalization of $22.5 billion (the total capitalization of the New York Stock Exchange was then estimated at $26.5 billion).[74]

Although suffering ill health, J. P. Morgan testified before the Pujo Committee and faced several days of questioning from Samuel Untermyer. Untermyer and Morgan's famous exchange on the fundamentally psychological nature of banking—that it is an industry built on trust—is often quoted in business articles:[75][76]

Untermyer: Is not commercial credit based primarily upon money or property?
Morgan: No, sir. The first thing is character.
Untermyer: Before money or property?
Morgan: Before money or anything else. Money cannot buy it … a man I do not trust could not get money from me on all the bonds in Christendom.[75]

Associates of Morgan blamed his continued physical decline on the hearings. He became ill in February and died on March 31, 1913, nine months before the Federal Reserve officially replaced the "money trust" as lender of last resort.[75]

Timeline edit

Timeline of panic in New York City[77]
Monday, October 14 Otto Heinze begins purchasing to corner the stock of United Copper.
Wednesday, October 16 Heinze's corner fails spectacularly. Heinze's brokerage house, Gross & Kleeberg is forced to close. This is the date traditionally cited as when the corner failed.
Thursday, October 17 The Exchange suspends Otto Heinze and Company. The State Savings Bank of Butte, Montana, owned by Augustus Heinze announces it is insolvent. Augustus is forced to resign from Mercantile National Bank. Runs begin at Augustus' and his associate Charles W. Morse's banks.
Sunday, October 20 The New York Clearing House forces Augustus and Morse to resign from all their banking interests.
Monday, October 21 Charles T. Barney is forced to resign from the Knickerbocker Trust Company because of his ties to Morse and Heinze. The National Bank of Commerce says it will no longer serve as clearing house.
Tuesday, October 22 A bank run forces the Knickerbocker to suspend operations.
Wednesday, October 23 J.P. Morgan persuades other trust company presidents to provide liquidity to the Trust Company of America, staving off its collapse.
Thursday, October 24 Treasury Secretary George Cortelyou agrees to deposit Federal money in New York banks. Morgan persuades bank presidents to provide $23 million to the New York Stock Exchange to prevent an early closure.
Friday October 25 Crisis is again narrowly averted at the Exchange.
Sunday, October 27 The City of New York tells Morgan associate George Perkins that if they cannot raise $20–30 million by November 1, the city will be insolvent.
Tuesday, October 29 Morgan purchased $30 million in city bonds, discreetly averting bankruptcy for the city.
Saturday, November 2 Moore & Schley, a major brokerage, nears collapse because its loans were backed by the Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company (TC&I), a stock whose value is uncertain. A proposal is made for U.S. Steel to purchase TC&I.
Sunday, November 3 A plan is finalized for U.S. Steel to take over TC&I.
Monday, November 4 President Theodore Roosevelt approves U.S. Steel's takeover of TC&I, despite anticompetitive concerns.
Tuesday, November 5 Markets are closed for Election Day (no federal elections were actually held this year).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This curb market later became the American Stock Exchange.
  2. ^ He had rescued the U.S. Treasury during the Panic of 1893.
  3. ^ Here trading nearly collapsed at the end of October as banks were reluctant to lend.
  4. ^ He is commanding two bears symbolize "Interstate Commerce Commission" and "Federal Courts". From Puck, May 8, 1907.
  5. ^ A February 2, 1910, editorial cartoon in Puck titled: "The Central Bank—Why should Uncle Sam establish one, when Uncle Pierpont is already on the job?"

References edit

  1. ^ "AMERICAN BANKS "IN THE JUNGLE"". The Advertiser. Adelaide. March 16, 1933. p. 8. Retrieved November 22, 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^ Yale M. Braunstein, "The Role of Information Failures in the Financial Meltdown" December 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, School of Information, UC Berkeley, Summer 2009
  3. ^ "What Prior Market Crashes Can Teach Us About Navigating the Current One". Morningstar, Inc. Retrieved June 25, 2020.
  4. ^ Panic of 1907: J.P. Morgan Saves the Day
  5. ^ Born of a Panic: Forming the Fed System
  6. ^ Tucker, Abigail (October 9, 2008). "The Financial Panic of 1907: Running from History". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  7. ^ Tallman & Moen 1990, pp. 3–4
  8. ^ Odell & Weidenmier 2004
  9. ^ Paul Saffo, ABC News (April 17, 2008)
  10. ^ a b Tallman & Moen 1990, p. 4
  11. ^ a b Noyes 1909, pp. 361–2
  12. ^ Edwards 1907, p. 66
  13. ^ As measured by an index of all listed stocks, according to Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 19
  14. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 20
  15. ^ a b Kindleberger & Aliber 2005, p. 102
  16. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 32
  17. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 31
  18. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 38–40
  19. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 43–44
  20. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 45
  21. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 47–48
  22. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 49
  23. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 51–55
  24. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 61–62
  25. ^ a b c Tallman & Moen 1990, p. 7
  26. ^ Historic Pittsburg February 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ Moen & Tallman 1992, p. 612
  28. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 68
  29. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 79
  30. ^ "WHEN THE POUND SAVED THE DOLLAR". Western Argus. Kalgoorlie, WA. December 8, 1931. p. 36. Retrieved November 22, 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 85
  32. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 101
  33. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 83–86
  34. ^ Chernow 1990, p. 123
  35. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 87–88
  36. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 93
  37. ^ a b Tallman & Moen 1990, p. 8
  38. ^ Chernow 1998, pp. 542–44
  39. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 99
  40. ^ Chernow 1990, p. 125
  41. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 100–01
  42. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 102–03
  43. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 103–07
  44. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 108
  45. ^ a b Chernow 1990, p. 126
  46. ^ Tallman & Moen 1990, p. 9
  47. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 111
  48. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 111–12
  49. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 116
  50. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 116–117
  51. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 122
  52. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 124
  53. ^ a b Chernow 1990, p. 127
  54. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 124–127
  55. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 131
  56. ^ a b Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 132
  57. ^ a b Chernow 1990, pp. 128–29
  58. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 133
  59. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 132–33
  60. ^ US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions, National Bureau of Economic Research. Retrieved on September 22, 2008.
  61. ^ a b Calomiris & Gorton 1992, p. 114
  62. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 141–42
  63. ^ Smith 2004, pp. 99–100
  64. ^ Miron 1986, p. 130
  65. ^ Prins 2014, Chapter 1: The Early 1910s: Post-Panic Creature and Party Posturings
  66. ^ "1908 Photo: Frank A. Vanderlip leads a U.S. business delegation to Japan to meet with Japanese business leaders including Shibusawa Eiichi and representatives of Mitsui & Co. for their assistance in resolving The Panic of 1907 and the unstable U.S. Stock Market". TheEmperorandtheSpy.com. 2020.
  67. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 143
  68. ^ a b Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 146
  69. ^ McNelis 1969, pp. 154–67
  70. ^ Chernow 1990, pp. 122–123
  71. ^ Chernow 1990, p. 148
  72. ^ Jean Strouse. "Here's How It's Done, Hank: A Parable From a Crisis of a Century Ago". The Washington Post (September 28, 2008), p. b1. Retrieved on September 30, 2008.
  73. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 182
  74. ^ Bruner & Carr 2007, p. 148
  75. ^ a b c Bruner & Carr 2007, pp. 182–83
  76. ^ Chernow 1990, p. 154
  77. ^ Distilled from Bruner & Carr 2007

Bibliography edit

  • Bruner, Robert F.; Carr, Sean D. (2007), The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned from the Market's Perfect Storm, Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-470-15263-8
  • Bruner, Robert F. and Sean Carr, "The Panic of 1907, (Darden Case No. UVA-G-0619, U of Virginia – Darden School of Business, (2009)
  • Calomiris, Charles W.; Gorton, Gary (1992), "The Origins of Banking Panics: Models, Facts and Bank Regulation", in Hubbard, R. Glenn (ed.), Financial Markets and Financial Crises, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-35588-7
  • Caporale, Tony; McKiernan, Barbara (1998), "Interest Rate Uncertainty and the Founding of the Federal Reserve", The Journal of Economic History, 58 (4): 1110–17, doi:10.1017/S0022050700021756, S2CID 154320520
  • Carosso, Vincent P. (1987), The Morgans: Private International Bankers, 1854–1913, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-58729-8
  • Chernow, Ron (1990), The House of Morgan: An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance, New York: Grove Press, ISBN 978-0-8021-3829-3
  • Chernow, Ron (1998), Titan: the Life of John D. Rockefeller, Sr, New York: Random House, ISBN 978-0-679-43808-3
  • Edwards, Adolph (1907), The Roosevelt Panic of 1907 (PDF), Anitrock Pub. Co
  • Fohlin, Caroline, and Zhikun Lu. "How Contagious Was the Panic of 1907? New Evidence from Trust Company Stocks." AEA Papers and Proceedings. Vol. 111. 2021. online
  • Friedman, Milton; Jacobson Schwartz, Anna (1963), A Monetary History of the United States: 1867–1960, Princeton: Princeton University Press, ISBN 978-0-691-00354-2
  • Gorton, Gary (2009), "Clearinghouses and the Origin of Central Banking in the United States", The Journal of Economic History, 45 (2): 277–283, doi:10.1017/S0022050700033957, S2CID 154291456
  • Gorton, Gary; Huang, Lixin (2006), "Bank panics and the endogeneity of central banking" (PDF), Journal of Monetary Economics, 53 (7): 1613–1629, doi:10.1016/j.jmoneco.2005.05.015
  • Herrick, Myron T. (1908), "The Panic of 1907 and Some of Its Lessons", Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 31 (2): 8–25, doi:10.1177/000271620803100203, JSTOR 1010701, S2CID 144195201
  • Jaremski, Matthew, and David C. Wheelock. "Interbank Networks and the Interregional Transmission of Financial Crises: Evidence from the Panic of 1907." FRB St. Louis Working Paper 2022-20 (2022). online
  • Johnson, Owen (1913), The Sixty-first Second (PDF), New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company, OCLC 3101622. Retrieved January 11, 2010.
  • Kynaston, David (2017). Till Time's Last Sand: A History of the Bank of England, 1694–2013. New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 261–262. ISBN 978-1408868560.
  • Leab, Daniel, ed. (2014). Encyclopedia of American Recessions and Depressions. ABC-CLIO 2 vol 919 pp. ISBN 9781598849462. pp 329–78
  • Kindleberger, Charles P.; Aliber, Robert (2005), Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (5th ed.), Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, ISBN 978-0-471-46714-4
  • McNelis, Sarah (1969), Copper King at War: The Biography of F. Augustus Heinze (2nd ed.), Missoula: University of Montana Press, OCLC 7369533
  • Miron, Jeffrey A. (1986), "Financial Panics, the Seasonality of the Nominal Interest Rate, and the Founding of the Fed" (PDF), American Economic Review, 76 (1): 125–40
  • Moen, Jon; Tallman, Ellis (1992), "The Bank Panic of 1907: The Role of the Trust Companies", The Journal of Economic History, 52 (3): 611–30, doi:10.1017/S0022050700011414, S2CID 154316738
  • Noyes, Alexander Dana (1909), Forty Years of American Finance, G. P. Putnam's sons, ISBN 978-0-405-13672-6
  • Odell, Kerry A.; Weidenmier, Marc D. (2004), "Real Shock, Monetary Aftershock: The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and the Panic of 1907" (PDF), The Journal of Economic History, 64 (4): 1002–1027, doi:10.1017/S0022050704043062, hdl:10419/94590, S2CID 155027411
  • Prins, Nomi (2014), All the Presidents' Bankers: The Hidden Alliances that Drive American Power, New York: Bold Type Books, ISBN 978-1-56858-491-1
  • Smith, B. Mark (2004), A History of the Global Stock Market; From Ancient Rome to Silicon Valley, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, ISBN 978-0-226-76404-7
  • Sprague, Oliver M.W. (1908), "The American Crisis of 1907", The Economic Journal, 18 (71): 353–372, doi:10.2307/2221551, JSTOR 2221551
  • Tallman, Ellis W.; Moen, Jon (1990), (PDF), Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review, 75: 2–13, archived from the original (PDF) on October 29, 2008, retrieved April 3, 2008. Retrieved on September 14, 2008.

External links edit

  • "Panic of 1907"—Federal Reserve History

panic, 1907, also, known, 1907, bankers, panic, knickerbocker, crisis, financial, crisis, that, took, place, united, states, over, three, week, period, starting, october, when, york, stock, exchange, suddenly, fell, almost, from, peak, previous, year, panic, o. The Panic of 1907 also known as the 1907 Bankers Panic or Knickerbocker Crisis 1 was a financial crisis that took place in the United States over a three week period starting in mid October when the New York Stock Exchange suddenly fell almost 50 from its peak the previous year The panic occurred during a time of economic recession and there were numerous runs affecting banks and trust companies The 1907 panic eventually spread throughout the nation when many state and local banks and businesses entered bankruptcy The primary causes of the run included a retraction of market liquidity by a number of New York City banks and a loss of confidence among depositors exacerbated by unregulated side bets at bucket shops 2 Wall Street during the bank panic in October 1907 Federal Hall National Memorial with its statue of George Washington is seen on the right The panic was triggered by the failed attempt in October 1907 to corner the market on stock of the United Copper Company When the bid failed banks that had lent money to the cornering scheme suffered runs that later spread to affiliated banks and trusts leading a week later to the downfall of the Knickerbocker Trust Company New York City s third largest trust The collapse of the Knickerbocker spread fear throughout the city s trusts as regional banks withdrew reserves from New York City banks The panic then extended across the nation as vast numbers of people withdrew deposits from their regional banks causing the 8th largest decline in U S stock market history 3 The panic might have deepened if not for the intervention of financier J P Morgan 4 who pledged large sums of his own money and convinced other New York bankers to do the same to shore up the banking system That highlighted the limitations of the US Independent Treasury system which managed the nation s money supply but was unable to inject sufficient liquidity back into the market By November the financial contagion had largely ended only to be replaced by a further crisis due to the heavy borrowing of a large brokerage firm using the stock of Tennessee Coal Iron and Railroad Company TC amp I as collateral Collapse of TC amp I s stock price was averted by an emergency takeover by Morgan s U S Steel Corporation a move approved by the trust busting President Theodore Roosevelt The following year Senator Nelson W Aldrich a leading Republican established and chaired a commission to investigate the crisis and propose future solutions which led to the creation of the Federal Reserve System 5 6 Contents 1 Economic conditions 2 The panic 2 1 Cornering United Copper 2 2 Contagion spreads 2 3 Panic hits the trusts 2 4 J P Morgan 2 5 Stock exchange nears collapse 2 6 Crisis of confidence 2 7 Drama at the library 3 Aftermath 3 1 Central bank 3 2 Pujo Committee 4 Timeline 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksEconomic conditions edit nbsp Dow Jones Industrial Average 1904 1910 The bottom of 53 was recorded November 15 1907 When United States President Andrew Jackson allowed the charter of the Second Bank of the United States to expire in 1836 the U S was without any sort of central bank and the money supply in New York City fluctuated with the country s annual agricultural cycle Each autumn money flowed out of the city as harvests were purchased and in an effort to attract money back interest rates were raised Foreign investors then sent their money to New York to take advantage of the higher rates 7 From the January 1906 Dow Jones Industrial Average high of 103 the market began a modest correction that would continue throughout the year The April 1906 earthquake that devastated San Francisco contributed to the market instability prompting an even greater flood of money from New York to San Francisco to aid reconstruction 8 9 A further stress on the money supply occurred in late 1906 when the Bank of England raised its interest rates partly in response to UK insurance companies paying out so much to US policyholders and more funds remained in London than expected 10 From their peak in January stock prices declined 18 by July 1906 By late September stocks had recovered about half of their losses The Hepburn Act which gave the Interstate Commerce Commission ICC the power to set maximum railroad rates became law in July 1906 11 This depreciated the value of railroad securities 12 Between September 1906 and March 1907 the stock market slid losing 7 7 of its capitalization 13 Between March 9 and 26 stocks fell a further 9 8 14 This March collapse is sometimes referred to as a rich man s panic 15 The economy remained volatile through the summer A number of shocks hit the system the stock of Union Pacific among the most common stocks used as collateral fell 50 points that June an offering of New York City bonds failed in July the copper market collapsed in August the Standard Oil Company was fined 29 million for antitrust violations 15 In the first nine months of 1907 stocks were lower by 24 4 16 On July 27 The Commercial amp Financial Chronicle noted that the market keeps unstable no sooner are these signs of new life in evidence than something like a suggestion of a new outflow of gold to Paris sends a tremble all through the list and the gain in values and hope is gone 17 Several bank runs occurred outside the US in 1907 in Egypt in April and May in Japan in May and June in Hamburg and Chile in early October 11 The fall season was always a vulnerable time for the banking system combined with the roiled stock market even a small shock could have grave repercussions 10 The panic editCornering United Copper edit The 1907 panic began with a stock manipulation scheme to corner the market in F Augustus Heinze s United Copper Company Heinze had made a fortune as a copper magnate in Butte Montana In 1906 he moved to New York City where he formed a close relationship with notorious Wall Street banker Charles W Morse Morse had once successfully cornered New York City s ice market and together with Heinze gained control of many banks the pair served on the boards of at least six national banks ten state banks five trust companies and four insurance firms 18 nbsp The curb outside the New York Stock Exchange s building where panic began n 1 Augustus brother Otto devised the scheme to corner United Copper believing that the Heinze family already controlled a majority of the company He also believed that a significant number of the Heinze s shares had been borrowed and sold short by speculators betting that the stock price would drop and that they could thus repurchase the borrowed shares cheaply pocketing the difference Otto proposed a short squeeze in which the Heinzes would aggressively purchase as many remaining shares as possible and then force the short sellers to pay for their borrowed shares The aggressive purchasing would drive up the share price and being unable to find shares elsewhere the short sellers would have no option but to turn to the Heinzes who could then name their price 19 To finance the scheme Otto Augustus and Charles Morse met with Charles T Barney president of the city s third largest trust the Knickerbocker Trust Company Barney had provided financing for previous Morse schemes Morse however cautioned Otto that in order to attempt the squeeze Otto needed much more money than Barney had and Barney declined to provide funding 20 Otto decided to attempt the corner anyway On Monday October 14 he began aggressively purchasing shares of United Copper which rose in one day from 39 to 52 per share On Tuesday Oct 15 he issued the call for short sellers to return the borrowed stock The share price rose to nearly 60 but the short sellers were able to find plenty of United Copper shares from sources other than the Heinzes Otto had misread the market and the share price of United Copper began to collapse 21 The stock closed at 30 on Tuesday and fell to 10 by Wednesday Oct 16 Otto Heinze was ruined The stock of United Copper was traded outside the hall of the New York Stock Exchange literally an outdoor market on the curb this curb market would later become the American Stock Exchange After the crash The Wall Street Journal reported Never has there been such wild scenes on the Curb so say the oldest veterans of the outside market 22 Contagion spreads edit The failure of the corner left Otto unable to meet his obligations and sent his brokerage house Gross amp Kleeberg into bankruptcy On Thursday October 17 the New York Stock Exchange suspended Otto s trading privileges As a result of United Copper s collapse the State Savings Bank of Butte Montana owned by F Augustus Heinze announced its insolvency The Montana bank had held United Copper stock as collateral against some of its lending and had been a correspondent bank for the Mercantile National Bank in New York City of which F Augustus Heinze was then president F Augustus Heinze s association with the corner and the insolvent State Savings Bank proved too much for the board of the Mercantile to accept Although they forced him to resign before lunch time 23 by then it was too late As news of the collapse spread depositors rushed en masse to withdraw money from the Mercantile National Bank The Mercantile had enough capital to withstand a few days of withdrawals but depositors began to pull cash from the banks of the Heinzes associate Charles W Morse Runs occurred at Morse s National Bank of North America and the New Amsterdam National Afraid of the impact the tainted reputations of Augustus Heinze and Morse could have on the banking system the New York Clearing House a consortium of the city s banks forced Morse and Heinze to resign all banking interests 24 By the weekend after the failed corner there was not yet systemic panic Funds were withdrawn from Heinze associated banks only to be deposited with other banks in the city 25 A week later many regional stock exchanges throughout the nation were closing or limiting trading For example the Pittsburgh city s stock exchange closed for three months starting on October 23 1907 26 Panic hits the trusts edit nbsp Headquarters of the Knickerbocker Trust Company at the northwest corner of Fifth Avenue and 34th StreetIn the early 1900s trust companies were booming in the decade before 1907 their assets had grown by 244 During the same period national bank assets grew by 97 while state banks in New York increased by 82 27 The leaders of the high flying trusts were mainly prominent members of New York s financial and social circles One of the most respected was Charles T Barney whose late father in law William Collins Whitney was a famous financier Barney s Knickerbocker Trust Company was the third largest trust in New York 28 Because of past association with Charles W Morse and F Augustus Heinze on Monday October 21 the board of the Knickerbocker asked that Barney resign depositors may have first begun to pull deposits from the Knickerbocker on October 18 prompting the concern 25 That day the National Bank of Commerce where J P Morgan was a dominant factor announced it would not serve as clearing house for the Knickerbocker On October 22 the Knickerbocker faced a classic bank run From the bank s opening the crowd grew As The New York Times reported as fast as a depositor went out of the place ten people and more came asking for their money and the police were asked to send some men to keep order 29 Two van loads of notes were quickly unloaded yet even this failed to calm the panic stricken depositors Directors and other officials of the Trust forced their way through the crowd assuring them that everyone would be paid 30 In less than three hours 8 million was withdrawn from the Knickerbocker Shortly after noon it was forced to suspend operations 25 As news spread other banks and trust companies were reluctant to lend any money The interest rates on loans to brokers at the stock exchange soared to 70 and with brokers unable to get money stock prices fell to a low not seen since December 1900 31 The panic quickly spread to two other large trusts Trust Company of America and Lincoln Trust Company By Thursday October 24 a chain of failures littered the street Twelfth Ward Bank Empire City Savings Bank Hamilton Bank of New York First National Bank of Brooklyn International Trust Company of New York Williamsburg Trust Company of Brooklyn Borough Bank of Brooklyn Jenkins Trust Company of Brooklyn and the Union Trust Company of Providence 32 J P Morgan edit nbsp J P Morgan the dominant banker in New York City n 2 When the chaos began to shake the confidence of New York s banks the city s most famous banker was out of town J P Morgan the eponymous president of J P Morgan amp Co was attending a church convention in Richmond Virginia Morgan was not only the city s wealthiest and most well connected banker but he had experience with other similar financial crises he had helped rescue the U S Treasury during the Panic of 1893 As news of the crisis gathered Morgan returned to Wall Street from his convention late on the night of Saturday October 19 The following morning the library of Morgan s brownstone at Madison Avenue and 36th St had become a revolving door of New York City bank and trust company presidents arriving to share information about and seek help surviving the impending crisis 33 34 Morgan and his associates examined the books of the Knickerbocker Trust and decided it was insolvent so they did not intervene to stop the run Its failure however triggered runs on even healthy trusts prompting Morgan to take charge of the rescue operation On the afternoon of Tuesday October 22 the president of the Trust Company of America asked Morgan for assistance That evening Morgan conferred with George F Baker the president of First National Bank James Stillman of the National City Bank of New York the ancestor of Citibank and the United States Secretary of the Treasury George B Cortelyou Cortelyou said that he was ready to deposit government money in the banks to help shore up their deposits After an overnight audit of the Trust Company of America showed the institution to be sound on Wednesday afternoon Morgan declared This is the place to stop the trouble then 35 As a run began on the Trust Company of America Morgan worked with Stillman and Baker to liquidate the company s assets to allow the bank to pay depositors The bank survived to the close of business but Morgan knew that additional money would be needed to keep it solvent through the following day That night he assembled the presidents of the other trust companies and held them in a meeting until midnight when they agreed to provide loans of 8 25 million to allow the Trust Company of America to stay open the next day 36 On Thursday morning Cortelyou deposited around 25 million into a number of New York banks 37 John D Rockefeller the wealthiest man in the United States deposited a further 10 million in Stillman s National City Bank 37 Rockefeller s massive deposit left the National City Bank with the deepest reserves of any bank in the city To instill public confidence Rockefeller phoned Melville Stone the manager of the Associated Press and told him that he would pledge half of his wealth to maintain U S credit 38 Stock exchange nears collapse edit nbsp Floor of the New York Stock Exchange pictured in 1908 n 3 Despite the infusion of cash the banks of New York were reluctant to make the short term loans they typically provided to facilitate daily stock trades Prices on the exchange began to crash owing to the lack of funds to finance purchases At 1 30 p m Thursday October 24 Ransom Thomas the president of the New York Stock Exchange rushed to Morgan s offices to tell him that he would have to close the exchange early Morgan was emphatic that an early close of the exchange would be catastrophic 39 40 Morgan summoned the presidents of the city s banks to his office They started to arrive at 2 p m Morgan informed them that as many as 50 stock exchange houses would fail unless 25 million was raised in 10 minutes By 2 16 p m 14 bank presidents had pledged 23 6 million to keep the stock exchange afloat The money reached the market at 2 30 p m in time to finish the day s trading and by the 3 o clock market close 19 million had been loaned out Disaster was averted Morgan usually eschewed the press but as he left his offices that night he made a statement to reporters If people will keep their money in the banks everything will be all right 41 Friday however saw more panic on the exchange Morgan again approached the bank presidents but this time was only able to convince them to pledge 9 7 million In order for this money to keep the exchange open Morgan decided the money could not be used for margin sales The volume of trading on Friday was 2 3 that of Thursday The markets again narrowly made it to the closing bell 42 Crisis of confidence edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp John D Rockefeller George B Cortelyou Lord Rothschild and James Stillman some of the best known names on Wall Street They tried to restore confidence in the economy Morgan Stillman Baker and the other city bankers were unable to pool money indefinitely Even the U S Treasury was low on funds Public confidence needed to be restored and on Friday evening the bankers formed two committees one to persuade the clergy to calm their congregations on Sunday and a second to explain to the press the various aspects of the financial rescue package Europe s most famous banker Lord Rothschild sent word of his admiration and respect for Morgan 43 In an attempt to gather confidence the Treasury Secretary Cortelyou agreed that if he returned to Washington it would send a signal to Wall Street that the worst had passed 44 45 To ensure a free flow of funds on Monday the New York Clearing House issued 100 million in loan certificates to be traded between banks to settle balances allowing them to retain cash reserves for depositors 46 Reassured both by the clergy and the newspapers and with bank balance sheets flush with cash a sense of order returned to New York that Monday 47 Unbeknownst to Wall Street a new crisis was being averted in the background On Sunday Morgan s associate George Perkins was informed that the City of New York required at least 20 million by November 1 or it would go bankrupt The city tried to raise money through a standard bond issue but failed to gather enough financing On Monday and again on Tuesday New York Mayor George McClellan approached Morgan for assistance In an effort to avoid the disastrous signal that a New York City bankruptcy would send Morgan contracted to purchase 30 million worth of city bonds 48 45 Drama at the library edit Although calm was largely restored in New York by Saturday November 2 yet another crisis loomed One of the exchange s largest brokerage firms Moore amp Schley was heavily in debt and in danger of collapse The firm had borrowed heavily using shares of the Tennessee Coal Iron and Railroad Company TC amp I as collateral With the value of the thinly traded stock under pressure many banks would likely call the loans of Moore amp Schley on Monday and force an en masse liquidation of the firm s stock If that occurred it would send TC amp I shares plummeting devastating Moore and Schley and triggering further panic in the market 49 To avert the collapse of Moore amp Schley Morgan called an emergency conference at his library Saturday morning A proposal was made that the U S Steel Corporation a company Morgan had helped form through the merger of the steel companies of Andrew Carnegie and Elbert Gary would acquire TC amp I This would effectively save Moore amp Schley and avert the crisis The executives and board of U S Steel studied the situation and offered to either loan Moore amp Schley 5 million or buy TC amp I for 90 a share By 7 p m an agreement had not been reached and the meeting adjourned 50 By then Morgan was drawn into another situation There was deep concern that the Trust Company of America and the Lincoln Trust might fail to open on Monday due to continuing runs by depositors On Saturday evening 40 50 bankers gathered at the library to discuss the crisis with the clearing house bank presidents in the East room and the trust company executives in the West room Morgan and those dealing with the Moore amp Schley situation moved to the librarian s office There Morgan told his counselors that he would agree to help shore up Moore amp Schley only if the trust companies would work together to bail out their weakest brethren 51 The discussion among the bankers continued late into Saturday night but without much progress Around midnight J P Morgan informed a leader of the trust company presidents that keeping Moore amp Schley afloat would require 25 million and he would not commit those funds unless the problems with the trust companies could also be resolved The trust company executives understood they would not receive further help from Morgan they would have to finance any bailout of the two struggling trust companies At 3 a m about 120 bank and trust company officials assembled to hear a full report on the status of the failing trust companies While the Trust Company of America was barely solvent the Lincoln Trust Company was probably 1 million short of what it needed to cover depositor accounts As discussion ensued the bankers realized that Morgan had locked them in the library and pocketed the key to force a solution 52 the sort of strong arm tactic he had been known to use in the past 53 Morgan then entered the talks and advised the trust companies that they must provide a loan of 25 million to save the weaker institutions The trust presidents were still reluctant to act but Morgan informed them that if they did not it would lead to a complete collapse of the banking system Through his considerable influence at about 4 45 a m he persuaded the unofficial leader of the trust companies to sign the agreement and the remainder of the bankers followed 53 Having received these commitments Morgan allowed the bankers to go home 54 nbsp Cartoon of Theodore Roosevelt attacking Wall Street n 4 On Sunday afternoon and into the evening Morgan Perkins Baker and Stillman along with U S Steel s Gary and Henry Clay Frick worked at the library to finalize the deal for U S Steel to buy TC amp I and by Sunday night had a plan for acquisition But one obstacle remained the anti trust crusading President Theodore Roosevelt who had made breaking up monopolies a focus of his presidency 55 Frick and Gary traveled overnight by train to the White House to implore Roosevelt to set aside the application of the Sherman Antitrust Act and allow before the market opened a company that already held a 60 share of the steel market to make a large acquisition Roosevelt s secretary refused to see them but Frick and Gary convinced James Rudolph Garfield the Secretary of the Interior to bypass the secretary and arrange a meeting with the president With less than an hour before the Stock Exchange opened Roosevelt and Secretary of State Elihu Root began to review the proposed takeover and appreciate the crash likely to ensue if the merger was not approved 56 57 Roosevelt relented he later recalled of the meeting It was necessary for me to decide on the instant before the Stock Exchange opened for the situation in New York was such that any hour might be vital I do not believe that anyone could justly criticize me for saying that I would not feel like objecting to the purchase under those circumstances 56 When news reached New York confidence soared The Commercial amp Financial Chronicle reported that the relief furnished by this transaction was instant and far reaching 58 The final crisis of the panic had been averted 59 Aftermath editThe panic of 1907 occurred during a lengthy economic contraction measured by the National Bureau of Economic Research as occurring between May 1907 and June 1908 60 61 The interrelated contraction bank panic and falling stock market resulted in significant economic disruption Industrial production dropped further than after any previous bank run and 1907 saw the second highest volume of bankruptcies to that date Production fell by 11 and imports by 26 while unemployment rose to 8 from under 3 Immigration dropped to 750 000 people in 1909 from 1 2 million two years earlier 62 Since the end of the Civil War the United States had experienced panics of varying severity Economists Charles Calomiris and Gary Gorton rate the worst panics as those leading to widespread bank suspensions the panics of 1873 1893 and 1907 and a suspension in 1914 Widespread suspensions were forestalled through coordinated actions during the 1884 and 1890 panics A bank crisis in 1896 in which there was a perceived need for coordination is also sometimes classified as a panic 61 The frequency of crises and the severity of the 1907 panic added to concern about the outsized role of J P Morgan and renewed impetus toward a national debate on reform 63 In May 1908 Congress passed the Aldrich Vreeland Act which established the National Monetary Commission to investigate the panic and to propose legislation to regulate banking 64 Central bank edit Main article History of the Federal Reserve System A significant difference between the European and U S banking systems was the absence of a central bank in the United States European states were able to extend the supply of money during periods of low cash reserves The belief that the U S economy was vulnerable without a central bank was not new Early in 1907 banker Jacob Schiff of Kuhn Loeb amp Co warned in a speech to the New York Chamber of Commerce that unless we have a central bank with adequate control of credit resources this country is going to undergo the most severe and far reaching money panic in its history 65 In 1908 Frank A Vanderlip led a U S business delegation to Japan to meet with Japanese financial leaders including Taka Kawada Shibusawa Eiichi and his son Shibusawa Masao also founding members of Mitsui amp Co Takuma Dan amp Takamine Mitsui with the goal allying with the Japan to resolve the Panic of 1907 and the unstable U S Stock Market 66 Aldrich convened a secret conference with a number of the nation s leading financiers at the Jekyll Island Club off the coast of Georgia to discuss monetary policy and the banking system in November 1910 Aldrich and A P Andrew Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Department Paul Warburg representing Kuhn Loeb amp Co Frank A Vanderlip James Stillman s successor as president of the National City Bank of New York Henry P Davison senior partner of J P Morgan Company Charles D Norton president of the Morgan dominated First National Bank of New York and Benjamin Strong representing J P Morgan produced a design for a National Reserve Bank 67 The final report of the National Monetary Commission was published on January 11 1911 For nearly two years legislators debated the proposal and it was not until December 23 1913 that Congress passed the Federal Reserve Act President Woodrow Wilson signed the legislation immediately and the legislation was enacted on the same day December 23 1913 creating the Federal Reserve System 68 Charles Hamlin became the Fed s first chairman and none other than Morgan s deputy Benjamin Strong became president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York the most important regional bank with a permanent seat on the Federal Open Market Committee 68 Pujo Committee edit Main article Pujo Committee nbsp Cartoon of J P Morgan seizing control of banks n 5 Although Morgan was briefly seen as a hero widespread fears concerning plutocracy and concentrated wealth soon eroded this view Morgan s bank had survived but the trust companies that were a growing rival to traditional banks were badly damaged Some analysts believed that the panic had been engineered to damage confidence in trust companies so that banks would benefit 69 70 Others believed Morgan took advantage of the panic to allow his U S Steel company to acquire TC amp I 71 Although Morgan lost 21 million in the panic and the significance of the role he played in staving off worse disaster is undisputed he also became the focus of intense scrutiny and criticism 57 72 73 The chair of the House Committee on Banking and Currency Representative Arsene Pujo D La 7th convened a special committee to investigate a money trust the de facto monopoly of Morgan and New York s other most powerful bankers The committee issued a scathing report on the banking trade and found that the officers of J P Morgan amp Co also sat on the boards of directors of 112 corporations with a market capitalization of 22 5 billion the total capitalization of the New York Stock Exchange was then estimated at 26 5 billion 74 Although suffering ill health J P Morgan testified before the Pujo Committee and faced several days of questioning from Samuel Untermyer Untermyer and Morgan s famous exchange on the fundamentally psychological nature of banking that it is an industry built on trust is often quoted in business articles 75 76 Untermyer Is not commercial credit based primarily upon money or property Morgan No sir The first thing is character Untermyer Before money or property Morgan Before money or anything else Money cannot buy it a man I do not trust could not get money from me on all the bonds in Christendom 75 Associates of Morgan blamed his continued physical decline on the hearings He became ill in February and died on March 31 1913 nine months before the Federal Reserve officially replaced the money trust as lender of last resort 75 Timeline editTimeline of panic in New York City 77 Monday October 14Otto Heinze begins purchasing to corner the stock of United Copper Wednesday October 16Heinze s corner fails spectacularly Heinze s brokerage house Gross amp Kleeberg is forced to close This is the date traditionally cited as when the corner failed Thursday October 17The Exchange suspends Otto Heinze and Company The State Savings Bank of Butte Montana owned by Augustus Heinze announces it is insolvent Augustus is forced to resign from Mercantile National Bank Runs begin at Augustus and his associate Charles W Morse s banks Sunday October 20The New York Clearing House forces Augustus and Morse to resign from all their banking interests Monday October 21Charles T Barney is forced to resign from the Knickerbocker Trust Company because of his ties to Morse and Heinze The National Bank of Commerce says it will no longer serve as clearing house Tuesday October 22A bank run forces the Knickerbocker to suspend operations Wednesday October 23J P Morgan persuades other trust company presidents to provide liquidity to the Trust Company of America staving off its collapse Thursday October 24Treasury Secretary George Cortelyou agrees to deposit Federal money in New York banks Morgan persuades bank presidents to provide 23 million to the New York Stock Exchange to prevent an early closure Friday October 25Crisis is again narrowly averted at the Exchange Sunday October 27The City of New York tells Morgan associate George Perkins that if they cannot raise 20 30 million by November 1 the city will be insolvent Tuesday October 29Morgan purchased 30 million in city bonds discreetly averting bankruptcy for the city Saturday November 2Moore amp Schley a major brokerage nears collapse because its loans were backed by the Tennessee Coal Iron amp Railroad Company TC amp I a stock whose value is uncertain A proposal is made for U S Steel to purchase TC amp I Sunday November 3A plan is finalized for U S Steel to take over TC amp I Monday November 4President Theodore Roosevelt approves U S Steel s takeover of TC amp I despite anticompetitive concerns Tuesday November 5Markets are closed for Election Day no federal elections were actually held this year See also edit nbsp Banks portalMercantile National Bank Building A Central Bank as a Menace to Liberty by George H Earle Jr Philadelphia lawyer and businessman 1908 Notes edit This curb market later became the American Stock Exchange He had rescued the U S Treasury during the Panic of 1893 Here trading nearly collapsed at the end of October as banks were reluctant to lend He is commanding two bears symbolize Interstate Commerce Commission and Federal Courts From Puck May 8 1907 A February 2 1910 editorial cartoon in Puck titled The Central Bank Why should Uncle Sam establish one when Uncle Pierpont is already on the job References edit AMERICAN BANKS IN THE JUNGLE The Advertiser Adelaide March 16 1933 p 8 Retrieved November 22 2012 via National Library of Australia Yale M Braunstein The Role of Information Failures in the Financial Meltdown Archived December 22 2009 at the Wayback Machine School of Information UC Berkeley Summer 2009 What Prior Market Crashes Can Teach Us About Navigating the Current One Morningstar Inc Retrieved June 25 2020 Panic of 1907 J P Morgan Saves the Day Born of a Panic Forming the Fed System Tucker Abigail October 9 2008 The Financial Panic of 1907 Running from History Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved September 27 2017 Tallman amp Moen 1990 pp 3 4 Odell amp Weidenmier 2004 Paul Saffo ABC News April 17 2008 a b Tallman amp Moen 1990 p 4 a b Noyes 1909 pp 361 2 Edwards 1907 p 66 As measured by an index of all listed stocks according to Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 19 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 20 a b Kindleberger amp Aliber 2005 p 102 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 32 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 31 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 38 40 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 43 44 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 45 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 47 48 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 49 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 51 55 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 61 62 a b c Tallman amp Moen 1990 p 7 Historic Pittsburg Archived February 7 2017 at the Wayback Machine Moen amp Tallman 1992 p 612 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 68 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 79 WHEN THE POUND SAVED THE DOLLAR Western Argus Kalgoorlie WA December 8 1931 p 36 Retrieved November 22 2012 via National Library of Australia Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 85 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 101 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 83 86 Chernow 1990 p 123 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 87 88 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 93 a b Tallman amp Moen 1990 p 8 Chernow 1998 pp 542 44 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 99 Chernow 1990 p 125 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 100 01 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 102 03 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 103 07 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 108 a b Chernow 1990 p 126 Tallman amp Moen 1990 p 9 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 111 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 111 12 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 116 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 116 117 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 122 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 124 a b Chernow 1990 p 127 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 124 127 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 131 a b Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 132 a b Chernow 1990 pp 128 29 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 133 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 132 33 US Business Cycle Expansions and Contractions National Bureau of Economic Research Retrieved on September 22 2008 a b Calomiris amp Gorton 1992 p 114 Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 141 42 Smith 2004 pp 99 100 Miron 1986 p 130 Prins 2014 Chapter 1 The Early 1910s Post Panic Creature and Party Posturings 1908 Photo Frank A Vanderlip leads a U S business delegation to Japan to meet with Japanese business leaders including Shibusawa Eiichi and representatives of Mitsui amp Co for their assistance in resolving The Panic of 1907 and the unstable U S Stock Market TheEmperorandtheSpy com 2020 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 143 a b Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 146 McNelis 1969 pp 154 67 Chernow 1990 pp 122 123 Chernow 1990 p 148 Jean Strouse Here s How It s Done Hank A Parable From a Crisis of a Century Ago The Washington Post September 28 2008 p b1 Retrieved on September 30 2008 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 182 Bruner amp Carr 2007 p 148 a b c Bruner amp Carr 2007 pp 182 83 Chernow 1990 p 154 Distilled from Bruner amp Carr 2007Bibliography editBruner Robert F Carr Sean D 2007 The Panic of 1907 Lessons Learned from the Market s Perfect Storm Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 470 15263 8 Bruner Robert F and Sean Carr The Panic of 1907 Darden Case No UVA G 0619 U of Virginia Darden School of Business 2009 Calomiris Charles W Gorton Gary 1992 The Origins of Banking Panics Models Facts and Bank Regulation in Hubbard R Glenn ed Financial Markets and Financial Crises Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 35588 7 Caporale Tony McKiernan Barbara 1998 Interest Rate Uncertainty and the Founding of the Federal Reserve The Journal of Economic History 58 4 1110 17 doi 10 1017 S0022050700021756 S2CID 154320520 Carosso Vincent P 1987 The Morgans Private International Bankers 1854 1913 Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 58729 8 Chernow Ron 1990 The House of Morgan An American Banking Dynasty and the Rise of Modern Finance New York Grove Press ISBN 978 0 8021 3829 3 Chernow Ron 1998 Titan the Life of John D Rockefeller Sr New York Random House ISBN 978 0 679 43808 3 Edwards Adolph 1907 The Roosevelt Panic of 1907 PDF Anitrock Pub Co Fohlin Caroline and Zhikun Lu How Contagious Was the Panic of 1907 New Evidence from Trust Company Stocks AEA Papers and Proceedings Vol 111 2021 onlineFriedman Milton Jacobson Schwartz Anna 1963 A Monetary History of the United States 1867 1960 Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00354 2 Gorton Gary 2009 Clearinghouses and the Origin of Central Banking in the United States The Journal of Economic History 45 2 277 283 doi 10 1017 S0022050700033957 S2CID 154291456 Gorton Gary Huang Lixin 2006 Bank panics and the endogeneity of central banking PDF Journal of Monetary Economics 53 7 1613 1629 doi 10 1016 j jmoneco 2005 05 015 Herrick Myron T 1908 The Panic of 1907 and Some of Its Lessons Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 31 2 8 25 doi 10 1177 000271620803100203 JSTOR 1010701 S2CID 144195201 Jaremski Matthew and David C Wheelock Interbank Networks and the Interregional Transmission of Financial Crises Evidence from the Panic of 1907 FRB St Louis Working Paper 2022 20 2022 onlineJohnson Owen 1913 The Sixty first Second PDF New York Frederick A Stokes Company OCLC 3101622 Retrieved January 11 2010 Kynaston David 2017 Till Time s Last Sand A History of the Bank of England 1694 2013 New York Bloomsbury pp 261 262 ISBN 978 1408868560 Leab Daniel ed 2014 Encyclopedia of American Recessions and Depressions ABC CLIO 2 vol 919 pp ISBN 9781598849462 pp 329 78 Kindleberger Charles P Aliber Robert 2005 Manias Panics and Crashes A History of Financial Crises 5th ed Hoboken John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 471 46714 4 McNelis Sarah 1969 Copper King at War The Biography of F Augustus Heinze 2nd ed Missoula University of Montana Press OCLC 7369533 Miron Jeffrey A 1986 Financial Panics the Seasonality of the Nominal Interest Rate and the Founding of the Fed PDF American Economic Review 76 1 125 40 Moen Jon Tallman Ellis 1992 The Bank Panic of 1907 The Role of the Trust Companies The Journal of Economic History 52 3 611 30 doi 10 1017 S0022050700011414 S2CID 154316738 Noyes Alexander Dana 1909 Forty Years of American Finance G P Putnam s sons ISBN 978 0 405 13672 6 Odell Kerry A Weidenmier Marc D 2004 Real Shock Monetary Aftershock The 1906 San Francisco Earthquake and the Panic of 1907 PDF The Journal of Economic History 64 4 1002 1027 doi 10 1017 S0022050704043062 hdl 10419 94590 S2CID 155027411 Prins Nomi 2014 All the Presidents Bankers The Hidden Alliances that Drive American Power New York Bold Type Books ISBN 978 1 56858 491 1 Smith B Mark 2004 A History of the Global Stock Market From Ancient Rome to Silicon Valley Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 76404 7 Sprague Oliver M W 1908 The American Crisis of 1907 The Economic Journal 18 71 353 372 doi 10 2307 2221551 JSTOR 2221551 Tallman Ellis W Moen Jon 1990 Lessons from the Panic of 1907 PDF Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Economic Review 75 2 13 archived from the original PDF on October 29 2008 retrieved April 3 2008 Retrieved on September 14 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Panic of 1907 Panic of 1907 Federal Reserve History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Panic of 1907 amp oldid 1181286663, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.