6 The Stock Market Crash—And After amounted to $6,125,000,000 and, during September alone, a total of $1,015,000,000 was added, while brokers’ loans rose by $670,000,000. During the catastrophic month of October the flood of new corporate offerings persisted to the extent of $757,- 254,000, bringing new corporate issues for the first ten months of the year to $9,413,451,000, of which common stocks were $6,535,251,000. The financing by investment trusts and trading and holding com- panies absorbed $2,443,000,000 of the total new issues; the investment trust issues were, of course, a special type of “refunding” rather than new issues. It was largely this tremendous volume of new financing that projected the top-heavy market into the abyss. The Conference of Bankers On October 21st, with the market breaking wide open, the tape two hours late, and sellers of market leaders finding “air pockets” down which their offer- ings catapulted, leading bank executives gathered at the office of J. P. Morgan & Company. The conference included the heads of four of the greatest banks, representing in excess of $6,000,000,- 000 of resources, namely, the National City, Chase National, the Bankers’ Trust and the Guaranty Trust. Later in the day representatives of thirty leading stock exchange houses met in conference. Mr. Lamont of the Morgan firm, spokesman for the gathering of bankers, stated that the break was a “technical” one, not based on anything fundamentally