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13 Steps to a Stock Market Crash & The Economic Snowball Effect

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Presentation on theme: "13 Steps to a Stock Market Crash & The Economic Snowball Effect"— Presentation transcript:

1 13 Steps to a Stock Market Crash & The Economic Snowball Effect
The Crash 13 Steps to a Stock Market Crash & The Economic Snowball Effect

2 Stock Market Crash Stock prices climbed throughout the 1920s
highest peak occurred in Sept. 1929 In October, the market slowly declined Thurs., Oct. 24 = 13 million shares sold Tues., Oct. 29 (Black Tuesday) = 16.4 million shares sold Over the 2 days, $30 billion lost by investors 13 Steps to a Stock Market Crash: 1. confidence in market 2. speculation for quick profits 3. easy to buy on margin 4. speculation drives prices above real value 5. see problems & sell out of fear 6. prices fall 7. more worried buyers sell 8. average stock price drops more 9. fear 10. panic 11. race to sell (1st to sell will make more money before price drops too far) 12. prices plunge 13. market crashes

3 Economic Snowball Effect
You deposit money into the bank Bank invests your money Bank makes $ & pays its bills investments fail People withdraw $ before lost by bank – banks can’t pay bills – your deposited $ is lost Banks call in loans – you have no money to pay debts/loans Banks fail & close - business who gave you credit loses $ People are poor & can ‘t spend $ - businesses fail People laid off & wages cut More people poor & have no money to spend More businesses lose $ & fail More lay-offs & wage cuts Little $ to spend on international goods & countries have high import taxes to protect business—decreased international trade

4 Eventually more than 13 million are unemployed (25% of population)
Most people are hurt indirectly by the crash (bank failures, business closures, wage cuts, etc., not because of lost investments) Worldwide depression!


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