"As the probability of war suddenly rose, the financial crisis long ago foreseen by Bloch, Angell and others unfolded with terrible swiftness. What happened was a classic case of international financial contagion. The Vienna and Budapest markets, which had been sliding for more than a week, were closed on Monday, July 27, St Petersburg followed two days later, and by Thursday The Economist regarded the Berlin and Paris bourses as shut in all but name. The closure of the continental stock markets caused a twofold crisis in London. First, foreigners who had drawn commercial bills on London found it much harder to make remittances; those British banks which had accepted foreign bills suddenly faced a general default as the bills fell due. At the same time, there were large withdrawals of continental funds on deposit with London banks and sales of foreign-held securities. As Lord Rothschild nervously reported to his French cousins on July 27, 'All the foreign Banks and particularly the German ones took a very large amount of money out of the Stock Exchange to-day and . . . the markets were at one time quite demoralized, a good many weak speculators selling à nil prix.' London became, as The Economist put it, 'a dumping ground for liquidation for the whole Continent of Europe'. On July 29, with the clearing banks declining to accommodate their hard-pressed Stock Exchange clients, trading effectively ceased and the first firms began to fail. The next day the news broke that the well-known stockbrokers Derenburg & Co. had been 'hammered' (declared bankrupt); this, coupled with the Bank of England's decision to raise its discount rate from 3 to 5 per cent, deepened the gloom. On the morning of the 31st came what The Economist called the 'final thunderclap' - the closure of the Stock Exchange, followed by the Bank of England's decision to raise the discount rate again, to 8 per cent. There is no need to detail here the subsequent steps taken by the authorities to avert a complete financial collapse. The crucial point is that by July 31 the crisis had closed down the London stock market, and it stayed closed until January 4, 1915. There could be no better testimony to the size of the financial shock caused by the outbreak of war."
Stock market crash

January 1, 1970

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