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Authors: Benjamin Roth,James Ledbetter,Daniel B. Roth

The Great Depression (7 page)

BOOK: The Great Depression
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AUGUST 29, 1931
 
The Legal News advertises a foreclosure against Dr. B—covering about 5 apartment buildings in poor neighborhoods. The mortgage is $12000 and the whole thing can be bought for this amount. Four years ago, the owner was willing to sacrifice the property for $45000 and thought it was worth $75000. In normal times the rental income was $1000 per month. This is another example why a professional man should not invest in low-grade real estate. It takes almost full time to collect the rent, make the repairs, etc. The overhead is high and he is fortunate if he makes 6% clear over a period of years with nothing for his labor. Properties of this kind seldom have a speculative value.
 
People who have savings accounts in the Home Savings & Loan Co. are willing to sell them at a discount. They are also being accepted as payments on real estate, autos, and merchandise but the buyer always suffers a loss. If necessary I will accept them in fees and apply them on my mortgage.
 
Now that fall is coming I feel a little more cheerful for the coming winter although there is no sign of betterment. The steel mills are operating at 30% capacity, the lowest of any depression and farm products are still selling at record lows. I still do not understand why the prices of “blue chip” stocks do not come down. Amer. Tel. & T. is still selling at $170 and should come down at least to $100. General Electric is at 40 instead of about 18. Railroad stocks are way down but people are afraid of them because motor competition has made the future doubtful. [Later undated entry: “In the summer of 1932 AT&T went to 70. Blue chips could be held all thru.”]
 
 
8/26/36
 
Before long the pass books on Home Savings; Federal; Dollar and City Banks sold as low as 40¢ on the dollar. Prices were quoted every day in the papers and the sales were made mostly through regular brokerage houses. Speculators bought the books and used them for various purposes. Many bought real estate at foreclosure and from the banks—paid for it in passbooks they had purchased at a discount. In this way they bought valuable real estate at about 1/2 the amount of the first mortgage balance. Likewise when the Central Bank was liquidated speculators exchanged passbooks purchased at a big discount for 1st mortgages at face value. Money was king.
 
 
 
SEPTEMBER 1, 1931
 
Another big mob today waiting in line before the office of the Allied Council. They blocked the stairway and extended down through the Dollar Bank lobby.
 
Most people think another boom will start as soon as this depression ends. I cannot agree with them. I think the next five years will be a period of gradual recovery and that bargains in stocks and real estate will be available through the entire recovery period. The boom may then come in about 10 years after this period of recovery. Hard work, low wages and a period of accumulation are ahead of us.
 
Signs of the times: Prices are falling rapidly. The 1929 dollar buys $1.40 in merchandise. Men are beginning to “roll-their-own” cigarettes and pipe smoking has been increased because it is cheaper than cigars. A good cigar can again be bought for a nickel and the 3 for 10 and 2 for 5 stogies are back in popular favor. Office men and women take their lunch to work or go home during the noon hour instead of eating in town. It has become popular to wear old clothes—to brag about poverty and how much you lost in the 1929 crash. It is almost bad taste to give a big party or to drive a new car.
 
A good plan for the next 5 years would be to save and invest cautiously and plan to have funds in liquid form when the next crash comes.
 
Our wash-woman said yesterday was the first day’s work she has had in 3 months—her price is $2 instead of $3 and she is willing to work for almost anything she can get.
 
 
8/26/36
 
Looking back now this was a fair guess. Recovery has been moving gradually forward since the bottom was reached in summer of 1932. A spurt came in March 1935 and has continued to date. Bargains are still available in stocks altho they do not compare with what could have been done in 1932. The real estate taken back by the banks during past 5 years is still being liquidated at bargain prices but the choice is now limited. Rents are going up and it is probable that in another year the banks will have liquidated all their foreclosed real estate and then a more normal market will be established. As to the future—it is hard to say if we are heading for a boom or for a few years of normal business. The possibility of inflation makes a guess difficult.
 
 
 
SEPTEMBER 2, 1931
 
As nearly as I can make out from a study of past panics, the cycle of business is always moving down toward a panic or up toward a boom. It rarely for long travels in a straight line. At the present time we are clearly moving down and the turn has not yet come. In the making of investments it would also seem wise to wait for some sign of the upturn before jumping in. It is impossible to hit the exact turn but as long as things are still definitely on the downgrade there would seem to be no hurry. When the final upturn does come it seems to me it will continue up for 8 or 10 years and culminate in a boom and a crash. The wise investor will disregard the day-by-day fluctuations of the stock market or real estate market and base his buying and selling on these long periods of rise and fall. Above all, and I repeat it again and again—he must have liquid capital in time of depression to buy the bargains and then he must sell before the next crash. It is difficult if not impossible to do this but the conservative longtime investor who follows the general rule of buying stocks when they are selling far below their intrinsic value and nobody wants them, and of selling his stocks when people are bidding frantically for them at prices far above their intrinsic value—such an investor will pretty nearly hit the bull’s-eye. Among such investors are the Morgans, the Mellons and the Bakers. Their secret to a large extent lies in having liquid capital available and the courage to invest when things look the blackest. They say of Mr. Baker that he always bought good stocks when they sold below their intrinsic value—and then held on until the cows came home. It seems to me he took very little risk.
 
 
8/26/36
 
This advice was pretty sound. The turn in the depression came in the summer of 1932 and since then it has worked up—with numerous breaks—but always up. Here is what would have happened to a buyer of stocks in summer of 1932 as contrasted today:
 
Amer T &T 70 to 170; Yo Sheet & Tube 6 to 80; Warner Bros. 1/2 to 14; Western Union 17 to 80; U.S. Steel 20 to 68; Gen. Motors 8 to 100; Gen. Elec. 8 to 46.
 
 
 
SEPTEMBER 4, 1931
 
The Allied Council broke all records the other day by handling 1150 calls for relief in one day. There is no accurate record of how many people are on relief in Youngstown today but it is estimated at about 30,000—almost 20% of the population. Several efforts are being made to care for the needy this winter which is expected to be severe:
1. The Community Chest will have an extra drive for funds.
2. The city will issue bonds.
3. All churches are acting as collectors of food, clothing, etc.
 
Farm prices are steadily going down. Peaches, apples and plums are selling at 50¢ a bushel.
 
Banks are absolutely terrible in their insistence on payments on notes and mortgages. It is the old story of lending you an umbrella when the sun is shining and then demanding it back when it rains. If a depositor asks for his money he is regarded with suspicion—sometimes he is sent to one of the officials who wants to know why he wants the money—if they think he is hoarding it they try to shame him out of a withdrawal and only if he becomes unpleasant and insistent does he get his money. It is a good time
not
to owe money to a bank and many businesses are being ruined because the banks insist on liquidating their loans. Some businesses owe the banks so much money that the banks are afraid to press them too far for fear they will go into bankruptcy and thus avoid the whole loan.
 
SEPTEMBER 8, 1931
 
The 2nd National Bank of Youngstown is today absorbed by the Mahoning Bank. Popular gossip says this was done to avoid another bank failure.
 
Reform and dissatisfaction are in the air everywhere. People who are ordinarily moderate predict freely that if things do not get better very soon we will have a revolution in the U.S.A. and some form of Communism or dictatorship. Judge David Jenkins predicted this definitely last week in a talk before the Kiwanis Club.
 
The
N.Y. Times
reported yesterday that numerous small real estate bond companies have been formed in the past year to buy up defaulted real estate bonds. There is no open or active bond market and the owner has no way of knowing what they are worth. An unscrupulous buyer can get them at 20 or 30¢ on the dollar even tho they may be worth par. Most of the large real estate bond houses which sold these bonds have gone broke. Lawyers in large cities like New York and Chicago are reaping a harvest in foreclosures and receivership involving large office buildings and apartments which were erected in the years of frenzied finance.
 
SEPTEMBER 9, 1931
 
The Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. at a directors meeting decides to omit the quarterly dividend. The stock is now selling at $35 per share. This is lower than in the 1921 depression when it sold at 45. U.S. Steel is at 80 as compared to 70 in 1921. Railroads are all down to the 1921 levels—Penn at 34, NYC 64. It still seems to me that blue chip stocks such as AT&T at 165, Consolidated Gas at 90 and G.E. at 40 must come way down before it can be said that the market has been fully deflated.
 
I am getting weary of depression talk and patent remedies. You hear it on all sides. The favorite remedy is repeal of Prohibition and the bringing back of liquor in the hope that a new industry will give employment and that real estate values will be stimulated. Then there is a great deal of talk about socialism and Communism and revolution. It all seems silly to me. Everything will work itself out without these radical changes. The depression has loosed all the radical thinkers who call themselves “liberals.” The true liberal and conservative has been silenced and is in disgrace.
 
 
8/29/36
 
This guess was pretty accurate. In summer of 1932 these stocks were selling as follows: Sheet & Tube at 6; U.S. Steel at 17; Penn R.R. 5; N.Y.C. 8; AT&T 70; Consol Gas 15; GE 10.
 
Liquor became legal in 1933 but failed to help recovery. It stimulated the imbibers but not general businesses. Today we have 2 or 3 beer parlor lunchrooms in every block.
 
 
 
SEPTEMBER 10, 1931
 
An item in the financial column today states that the Payne Whitney estate increased $59 million in value during the 1929 boom. It consisted entirely of high grade stocks. Even tho the high grade stocks suffered in the depression very few of them were wiped out and will probably come back.
 
AT&T is still paying its $9 dividend and has proven to be an outstanding stock.
 
Many Youngstown millionaires have been hard hit by the failure of Youngstown Sheet & Tube to pay its dividend. In a great many cases these families have over a million tied up in Sheet & Tube and Republic Steel and depended entirely on these stocks for their income.
 
I feel more and more convinced that the time to buy stocks has not yet arrived because the blue chip stocks have not yet come down even tho the depression is already two years old.
 
 
8/29/36
 
AT&T paid its usual dividend thru the depression. Other high grade stocks did not but practically all of them have come back again and the holder who did not sell will lose nothing except the unpaid dividends.
 
 
 
SEPTEMBER 13, 1931
 
We bought peaches yesterday at 75¢ a bushel. The trees are still loaded to the ground and will go to waste because the fruit cannot be sold. In the meanwhile thousands are starving. It is hard to understand. There is no sign of a pick-up this fall. If anything things are worse. There is simply no money in circulation. This scarcity of money is what makes people think if more money were printed business would be better. This is a false and vicious theory.
 
SEPTEMBER 15, 1931
 
BOOK: The Great Depression
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