The Threat to Business 63
group of the wealthiest class. The probable effect
upon consumption and production would seem not
to be great.
But to the present holders of equity securities the
income from their shares will go on as before. The
shift in valuations compelled the former holders to
sell when they would have liked to buy, because the
real values were indicated by the continued income
from stocks. Panic prices of stocks did not record
the real valuation of them either by sellers or by
buyers. They merely recorded distress selling.
It should be remembered, also, that the majority
of stock holdings were not concerned in the panic
tradings, but remained where they were before the
panic, namely, in strong-boxes. The owners of these
holdings would not care whether the market had
gone up or down, because they were not trading in
securities ; they were relying upon the income of their
stocks and were concerned only in the continuing cash
dividends.
Chief Danger That of Fear
The chief danger, therefore, did not inhere in con-
ditions at all. It was the danger of fear, panicky
fear, which might be communicated from the stock
market to business. “My only fear is the fear of
fear” are the words of a courageous man. The
measures taken under the leadership of President
Hoover, therefore, were well calculated to allay
fear. There was danger that business, out of the
contagion of the stock panic, would refuse to make