Remedies and Preventives of Panic 245
The contention is that during the 1929 break the
governing authorities of the Exchange might have
come to its rescue in order to save the market from
a price level which was universally admitted to be
far below any reasonable estimate of the worth of
stocks traded. It has been said that the same scheme
was partly balked in 1914 by a ‘“‘gutter” market
which spontaneously sprang up. This showed that
it was impossible to keep traders from each other
very long against their will. There is a big differ-
ence between a long and a short period; the essence
of the scheme in 1929 was of a moratorium—to
extend enough but not too long the time for getting
buyers. That is, the virtue of the idea was not to fix
the minimum price, so much as thereby to give rea-
sonable time for a natural price to appear in place of
the artificially low price of suddenly forced sales.
Auctioneers have a minimum price on each article
offered at auction for any one day. Foreclosures on
mortgages require time, and ample notice given
through advertisement in order to gather buyers to
the scene of the foreclosure, from whom a natural
competition is to be expected to produce a reasonable
price for the foreclosed property. The stock ex-
change is the only place of public sale where the
forced selling of property is made instantaneous—to
the great detriment, during panic, of transfers by
any proper estimate of the value of stocks. It is not
always a practicable requirement. Every action
requires time.
There are records that the London and Conti-