• Thought of the Day

    Thought of the Day

    2000: I always tell people that if you put your head in the sand, your ass makes a bigger target.

    –Ralph Lambiase, director of the securities division, Connecticut State Dept. of Banking, in Financial Planning, June 1997, p. 51.

Today in Financial History

1999: Less than three months after breaking the 1200 barrier, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index closes above 1300 for the first time, finishing the day at 1307.26.

David M. Blitzer, chief investment strategist, Standard & Poor's Corp.

1933: The New York Stock Exchange reopens after closing for two weeks during Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt's bank holiday, and pent-up investors bust loose in a bullish stampede, whooping and hollering as they propel the Dow Jones Industrial Average to its biggest one-day percentage gain yet on record, a 15.3% leap, to close at 62.10. The Standard & Poor's Composite Index of 90 stocks soars 16.6%. Even so, stocks are trading at roughly 87% below their 1929 highs, share prices average just 0.65 times book value, and the average dividend yield (among those companies that can afford to pay one) is 8.7%. Stocks are trading at an estimated 10 times their earnings for the coming year.

Barrie A. Wigmore, The Crash and Its Aftermath: A History of Securities Markets in the United States, 1929-1933 (Greenwood Press, Westport, CT, and London, 1985), pp. 455-456;John Brooks, Once in Golconda: A True Drama of Wall Street, 1920-1938 (Harper & Row, New York, 1969), p. 141

1817: The New York Stock Exchange officially prohibits the "fictitious sales," or wash sales, that had enabled speculators to manipulate individual stocks without even owning them. But in defiance of the ban, the practice continues for decades. Typically, two brokers agree loudly in public to trade shares between themselves at a price significantly above or below the market price. (They have already built a large but secret position in the stock.) Then, when the market moves toward their price, the brokers dump their secret holdings at the newly favorable level and disallow their one public trade.

"A Reformed Stock Gambler" (William Armstrong), Stocks and Stock-Jobbing in Wall Street, with Sketches of the Brokers, and Fancy Stocks?, New York, 1848, p. 19;"Today in NYSE History," at www.nyse.com/about/TodayInNYSE.html