Causes of the Panic §1 the policy pursued, he was forced, of course, to insist upon an excessive margin for every loan in order to insure at least a sound margin of safety in the event that a collapse did take place.” Thus Mr. Cahill finds that “the real major cause of the collapse was the rash and reckless purchasing of fictitious values on credit.” Doubtless bankers thought they knew that stocks were being priced at fictitious levels, although the evidence on which they thought so is subject to review and critical analysis. All that they really knew was that stocks had risen rapidly. Undoubt- edly bankers were justified in taking alarm, not so much over the rapidly advancing prices of securities, as because of the vast number and amount of bor- rowings of banks on collateral or of borrowing with brokers as intermediaries, as reflected in the huge totals of margin accounts. Because of this manifest Overextension on the part of thousands of bor- rowers, the banks were right in demanding high collateral. It is tragically true, whether or not the high level of stock prices was justified, that bankers all over the country, despite their efforts, failed to increase their marginal demands for collateral to a point where the market could maintain a technically sound position. As early as August 12th, Senator Nye, of North Dakota, had claimed that a “tremendous proportion of the country’s money and credit is being sucked up from the interior, and, as one high authority expressed it, ‘phoned’ into Wall Street.”