Remedies and Preventives of Panic 253
the control of a block of stock that was entirely
undisturbed during the decline. Had there been
more such option agreements in use and fewer
margin accounts I feel sure that the market would
have given a much better account of itself.
The Appendix presents a complete copy of this
agreement, omitting only the name of the company
and the specific price at which the stock changed
hands.
In a margin account the purchaser of the security
obtains a loan against the security as collateral, this
loan being subject to call at any time. Theoretically
such a loan is the safest type of loan, since the
lender may at any time demand repayment, and,
failing to receive it, he may sell the collateral held
on the market. But it was found in actual practice
during the panic that it was impossible to sell in so
short a space of time all the collateral that stood
behind weakened loans, therefore many lenders were
forced to abstain from calling their loans, if only to
protect themselves from the losses that would ensue.
The securities behind these loans then hung over the
market to be sold as soon as prices rose sufficiently
to liquidate the loans. We have seen, therefore,
that while in ordinary times the collateral loan may
be perfectly safe, in times of stress it is not safe.
Because of the ease with which surplus funds may
be put into the call loan market and withdrawn when
needed, and in view of the ordinary safety of such
loans, they are usually made at a very low interest
rate. We have become accustomed, due to the large