44 The Stock Market Crash—And After fall in the market was not due to mob psychology, but “rather, the mob held on to the last minute with the greatest tenacity and finally got sold out instead of selling out.” There may be some substance in this view. But the testimony of market operators does not seem to bear out the assertion in any absolute sense. There was the fear of course, on the part of broker- age houses that made them sell their customers’ stock to protect themselves. But if the Commercial and Financial Chronicle be right in its contention, then there was no panic at all, since in a panic the mob psychology of fear predominates in the manner illustrated by a run on a bank when every one strives to draw out his funds before the rest; or a panic in a burning theater, where each tries to get out first. Federal Reserve Policy The Commercial and Financial Chroncile also suggested that the market had been sent on a new upward journey by Federal Reserve action during the early part of August, 1929, in sanctioning an increase in the New York Federal Reserve discount rate from § per cent to 6 per cent, with simultane- ous lowering of the buying rate for bankers’ accept- ances and the concurrent purchase of acceptances on a large scale. This, the Chronicle says, ‘meant the forcing out of reserve credit by the act of the Reserve System itself, and involved Federal