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Hoovers
Economic Condition Speech
November 5, 1929 |
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THE PRESIDENT'S NEWS CONFERENCE OF THE NATIONAL ECONOMIC
CONDITION
THE PRESIDENT. I haven't anything of any news here to announce.
I thought perhaps you might like that I discuss the business
situation with you just a little, but not from the point of view
of publication at all-simply for your own information. I see no
particular reasons for making any public statements about it,
either directly or indirectly.
The question is one somewhat of analysis. We have had a period
of overspeculation that has been extremely widespread, one of
those waves of speculation that are more or less uncontrollable,
as evidenced by the efforts of the Federal Reserve Board, and
that ultimately results in a crash due to its own weight. That
crash was perhaps a little expedited by the foreign situation,
in that one result of this whole phenomenon has been the
congestion of capital in the loan market in New York in the
driving up of money rates all over the world.
The foreign central banks having determined that they would
bring the crisis to an end, at least so far as their own
countries were concerned, advanced money rates very rapidly in
practically every European country in order to attract capital
that had drifted from Europe into New York, back into their own
industry and commerce. Incidentally, the effect of increasing
discount rates in Europe is much greater on their business
structure than it is with us. Our business structure is not so
sensitive to interest rates as theirs is. So their sharp
advancement of discount rates tended to affect this market, and
probably expedited or even started this movement. But once the
movement has taken place we have a number of phenomena that
rapidly develop. The first is that the domestic banks in the
interior of the United States, and corporations, withdraw their
money from the call market.
There has been a very great movement out of New York into the
interior of the United States, as well as some movement out of
New York into foreign countries. The incidental result of that
is to create a difficult situation in New York, but also to
increase the available capital in the interior. In the interior
there has been, in consequence, a tendency for interest rates to
fall at once because of the unemployed capital brought back into
interior points.
Perhaps the situation might be clearer on account of its
parallel with the last very great crisis, 1907-1908. In that
crash the same drain of money immediately took place into the
interior. In that case there was no Federal Reserve System.
There was no way to acquaint of capital movement over the
country, and the interest rates ran up to 300 percent. The
result was to bring about a monetary panic in the entire
country.
Here with the Federal Reserve System and the activity of the
Board, and the ability with which the situation has been
handled, there has been a complete isolation of the stock market
phenomenon from the rest of the business phenomena in the
country. The Board, in cooperation with the banks in New York,
has made ample capital available for the call market in
substitution of the withdrawals. This has resulted in a general
fall of interest rates, not only in the interior, but also in
New York, as witness the reduction of the discount rate. So that
instead of having a panic rise in interest rates with monetary
rise following it, we have exactly the reverse phenomenon-we
have a fallen interest rate. That is the normal thing to happen
when capital is withdrawn from the call market through
diminution in values.
The ultimate result of it is a complete isolation of the stock
market phenomenon from the general business phenomenon. In other
words, the financial world is functioning entirely normal and
rather more easily today than it was 2 weeks ago, because
interest rates are less and there is more capital available. The
effect on production is purely psychological. So far there might
be said to be from such a shock some tendency on the part of
people through alarm to decrease their activities, but there has
been no cancellation of any orders whatsoever. There has been
some lessening of buying in some of the luxury contracts, but
that is not a phenomenon itself.
The ultimate result of the normal course of things would be that
with a large release of capital from the speculative market
there will be more capital available for the bond and mortgage
market. That market has been practically starved for the last 4
or 5 months. There has been practically no-or very little at
least-of mortgage or bond money available, practically no bond
issues of any consequence. One result has been to create
considerable reserves of business. A number of States have not
been able to place their bonds for construction; a number of
municipalities with bond issues have been held up because of the
inability to put them out at what they considered fair rates.
There are a great number of business concerns that would proceed
with their activities in expansion through mortgage and bond
money which have had to delay. All of which comprises a very
substantial reserve in the country at the present time. The
normal result will be for the mortgage and bond market to spring
up again and those reserves to come in with increased
activities.
The sum of it is, therefore, that we have gone through a crisis
in the stock market, but for the first time in history the
crisis has been isolated to the stock market itself. It has not
extended into either the production activities of the country or
the financial fabric of the country, and for that I think we may
give the major credit to the constitution of the Federal Reserve
System.
And that is about a summary of the whole situation as it stands
at this moment. |
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