The Financial Panic of 1907: Running from History
Just over 100 years ago, Americans panicked as brokerage firms went bankrupt and investors pulled their money out of banks, instigating a nation-wide crisis
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian.com, October 10, 2008, Subscribe
Robert F. Bruner is the dean of the University of Virginia's Darden Graduate School of Business Administration. Last year, he and Sean D. Carr, the Director of Corporate Innovation Programs at the Darden Schools' Batten Institute, published "The Panic of 1907: Lessons Learned From the Market's Perfect Storm," detailing a historic financial crisis eerily similar to the one now gripping Wall Street.
What was the Panic of 1907, and what caused it?
The Panic of 1907 was a six-week stretch of runs on banks in New York City and other American cities in October and early November of 1907. It was triggered by a failed speculation that caused the bankruptcy of two brokerage firms. But the shock that set in motion the events to create the Panic was the earthquake in San Francisco in 1906. The devastation of that city drew gold out of the world's major money centers. This created a liquidity crunch that created a recession starting in June of 1907.
In 2008 , is the housing market the culprit this time?
Today's panic was triggered by the surprising discovery of higher defaults on subprime mortgages than anybody expected. This discovery occurred in late 2006 and early 2007. A panic always follows a real economic shock; panics are not random occurrences of market emotions. They are responses to unambiguous, surprising, costly events that spook investors.
But the first cause of a panic is the boom that precedes the panic. Every panic has been preceded by a very buoyant period of growth in the economy. This was true in 1907 and it was true in advance of 2007.
What are the differences between the panic of 1907 and the crisis of 2008?
Three factors stand out: higher complexity, faster speed and greater scale.
The complexity of markets today is magnitudes higher than a century ago. We have subprime loans that even the experts aren't sure how to value. We have trading positions, very complicated combinations of securities held by major institutions, on which the exposure is not clear. And we have the institutions themselves that are so complicated that it's hard to tell who among them is solvent and who is failing.
Then there is greater speed: we enjoy Internet banking and wire transfers that allow funds to move instantaneously across institutions across borders. And news now travels at the speed of light. Markets react immediately and this accelerates the pace of the panic.
The third element is scale. We've just past the TARP, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, funded at $ 700 billion. There may be another $500 billion in credit default swaps that will need to be covered. And there are billions more in other exposures. We could be looking at a cost in trillions. In current dollars, these amounts may well dwarf any other financial crisis in history. In terms of sheer human misery,the Crash of 1929 and the Great Depression still overshadow other financial crises, even today's. But we aren't done with the current crisis; surely it already stands out as one of the largest crises in all of financial history.
Describe J.P. Morgan and how he fit into Wall Street's culture in 1907.
J.P. Morgan was 70 years old at the time of the Panic. He was in the twilight of his extraordinarily successful career as a financier of the boom era, the Gilded Age of American expansion from 1865 to roughly 1900. He had engineered the mergers of firms that we would recognize today as still dominant—U.S. Steel, American Telephone and Telegraph, General Electric and the like. He was widely respected. In fact, the popular press personified him as the very image of the American capitalist. The little fellow on the Monopoly box with the striped pants and the balding head looks vaguely like J.P. Morgan.
He was a remarkable person. He had deep and extensive relations throughout the financial and business communities, and this is one of the keys to the leadership he exercised in the panic. He was a man of action; he galvanized people.
What did Morgan do to stop the panic?
You quell panics by organizing collective action to rescue institutions and generally convey confidence back into the market. Morgan was called back from Richmond, Va. by his partners when the panic hit. He took the equivalent of a red-eye flight, attaching his private Pullman car to a steam engine and hurtling back to New York City overnight. He arrived on Sunday, October 20th and immediately convened a meeting of the leading financiers at his mansion on 34th Street. He chartered working groups to get the facts and then over the next several weeks deployed the information to organize successive rescues of the major institutions. He did allow some institutions to fail, because he judged that they were insolvent already. But of the institutions that he declared he would save, every one survived.
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Comments (6)
I have a copy of a 1908 publication Review of Reviews they stated then that the world wide recession was caused by the German Reichstad lowering interest rates to 3%. That was Germany's federal reserve bank. Our Fed mimicked those low interest rates by multiples.
Posted by Craig Harfoot on June 9,2010 | 09:20 AM
For a less sanitized version of this history, and the resulting cause of the mess we are in today, see Freedom to Fascism, by the late Aaron Russo.
Posted by David on October 26,2008 | 10:05 AM
I was reading where Teddy Roosevelt called Morgan and asked him if he could do anything to stop this. Morgan did because he felt that it was need. We need people like both of these men to lead in this country now. We have lacked leaders in both wall street and in the goverment.
Posted by Jack on October 16,2008 | 05:50 PM
The general public was, and still is, complicit in the financial meltdown by entering into mortgages and credit card borrowings far in excess of the capacity to repay. No down payments, artificially low initial interest rates, and ignoring the question of affordability - all to provide an inappropriate immediate benefit, rather than saving and having patience to acquire - will always bear bitter fruit.
Posted by Jay on October 16,2008 | 05:37 PM
Another reason teaching history in the schools is important. We cannot keep consuming without being aware of the consequences of over indulgence. Another one of life's lessons.
Posted by Dean on October 16,2008 | 04:46 PM
Dean Bruner The Wall Street model of securitization has several elements that are not often mentioned. The rating agencies, insurers, and Wall Street Bankers believed that it is possoble to structure a "quality" security with poor underlying collateral. Impossible. Thus, they all share blame. The structuring of tranches by Wall was intended to create a priortization of the "first loss" pieces. The rating agencies, rated the most secure tranches as AAA. This was a flaw, in that the pools were composed entirely of subprime loans. Last, the rating agencies, who wer paid fees rated the paper as AAA, when they likely had no interest or understanding of real eatate loan underwriting.
Posted by Bill Dawson on October 13,2008 | 08:21 PM
Amazing how history repeats itself over and over yet time distances us from our past to a point that we repeat many of the fundamental errors already lived through by past generations. It appears that whether financial markets, foreign policy or other global direction we forget to look backward toward history for lessons before we plunge ourself into new problems and issues that our country has already seen and lived through in the past.
Posted by Doug on October 10,2008 | 03:14 PM