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<text id=89TT2753>
<link 93TG0008>
<link 93HT0786>
<link 90TT1931>
<link 90TT0194>
<title>
Oct. 23, 1989: Boom, Boom, Ka-Boom!
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Oct. 23, 1989 Is Government Dead?
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 66
Boom, Boom, Ka-boom!
</hdr><body>
<p>Panicked by a faltering buyout deal and a whiff of inflation,
the stock market posts its worst loss since the '87 crash and
provokes fears of a bearish season to come
</p>
<p>By John Greenwald
</p>
<p> The day was star-crossed: Friday the 13th in the month of
October, on the eve of the second anniversary of a devastating
market crash. "I'm telling you, psychology is really funny.
People get crazy in situations like that," said portfolio
strategist Elaine Garzarelli. Last week Friday the 13th lived
up to its frightful reputation. After drifting lower at a sleepy
pace for most of the day, the Dow Jones industrial average
abruptly lurched into a hair-raising sky dive in the final hour
of trading. By the time the 4 p.m. closing bell halted the rout,
the index had dropped a nightmarish 190.58 points, or nearly 7%,
to close at 2569.26.
</p>
<p> The sell-off was the sharpest since the market plunged 508
points on Oct. 19, 1987. In terms of points, it was the second
largest loss in Wall Street history; in percentage, the day
ranked twelfth worst. "It's total emotional and psychological
chaos," said Eugene Peroni, an analyst with Janney Montgomery
Scott, a Philadelphia brokerage firm. "People are dumping
everything. A great deal of money is being lost."
</p>
<p> The drop invited instant comparison with the month's two
historic calamities: the 1987 collapse on Oct. 19 and the 1929
debacle on Oct. 29. Particularly gnawing was the memory that
1987's Black Monday was preceded by a Friday plunge of 108.35
points. Last week's drop-off rekindled fears that an era of
heedless borrowing by corporations and the Federal Government
might finally be coming to grief. At the very least, the rout
reminded investors that the stock market is a volatile place
where fortunes can vanish at the touch of a computer key. After
one frantic hour of selling conducted to a large extent by
program trades, nearly $200 billion of stock values were wiped
out last week.
</p>
<p> The Bush Administration moved swiftly to avert any sense of
crisis after the market closed. Declared Treasury Secretary
Nicholas Brady: "It's important to recognize that today's stock
market decline doesn't signal any fundamental change in the
condition of the economy. The economy remains well balanced,
and the outlook is for continued moderate growth." But
Massachusetts Democrat Edward Markey, who chairs a House
subcommittee on telecommunications and finance, vowed to hold
hearings this week on the stock market slide. Said he: "This is
the second heart attack. My hope is that before we have the
inevitable third heart attack, we pay attention to these
problems."
</p>
<p> Experts found no shortage of culprits to blame for the
latest debacle. A series of downbeat realizations converged on
Friday, ranging from signs of a new burst of inflation to
sagging corporate profits to troubles in the junk-bond market
that has fueled major takeovers. The singular event that shook
investors was the faltering of a $6.75 billion labor-management
buyout of UAL, the parent company of United Airlines, the second
largest U.S. carrier. "That's when all hell broke loose," said
Robert Newman, a floor trader for Equitrade Partners. "It was
very reminiscent of something I do not care to think about."
</p>
<p> On one point most thoughtful Wall Streeters agreed: the
market had reached such dizzying heights that a correction of
some sort seemed almost inevitable. Propelled by favorable
economic news and a wave of multibillion-dollar takeovers,
stocks had soared more than 1,000 points since the 1987 crash.
But by last August some Wall Streeters were clearly worried.
Noted Donald Stone, a floor specialist for Lasker, Stone &
Stern: "I've been on the trading floor for 39 years, and I've
never seen the market go up so fast for so long without a major
break." Yet the bulls kept on running. Just last Monday the
market closed at a historic peak of 2791.41, its fifth record
high in as many sessions.
</p>
<p> The looming anniversary of 1987's crash had prompted many
on Wall Street to search for comparisons between 1987's boom and
this year's. In an investor newsletter dated Oct. 1, Shearson
Lehman Hutton cited twelve ways in which this year's rally
seemed more likely to last. Among them:
</p>
<p> -- Interest rates were rising then, while they are stable or
falling now.
</p>
<p> -- The economy was growing unsustainably in 1987, but more
gradually this year.
</p>
<p> -- Investor sentiment was wildly bullish then, and far more
cautious now.
</p>
<p> Yet this year's rally has rested on some shaky foundations.
Chief among them is the relentless pace of corporate takeovers,
which enriched everyone on Wall Street, from stockholders to
investment bankers. But the buyouts have been fueled by
financing from a junk-bond market that was severely weakened
last month when Canadian developer Robert Campeau nearly
defaulted on $1.27 billion of debt payments on loans that he had
used to acquire Allied Stores and Federated Department Stores.
In the wake of Campeau's problems, the money for new takeovers
has begun to dry up.
</p>
<p> Meanwhile, the Government's chief early-warning gauge of
inflation indicated last week that the U.S. economy may be
headed for trouble. The Labor Department said its Producer Price
Index rose 0.9% in September, or about 10% on an annual basis,
to break a three-month string of declining wholesale prices.
Earlier in the week, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan
suggested that the Fed remains wary of inflation and therefore
would be averse to easing interest rates. That was not what Wall
Street wanted to hear.
</p>
<p> The heaviest blow to the market came Friday afternoon. In
a three-paragraph statement, UAL said a labor-management group
headed by Chairman Stephen Wolf had failed to get enough
financing to acquire United. Several banks had apparently balked
at the deal", which was to be partly financed through junk
bonds. The takeover group said it would submit a revised bid "in
the near term," but the announcement stunned investors who had
come to view the United deal as the latest sure thing in the
1980s buyout binge. Said John Downey, a trader at the Chicago
Board Options Exchange: "The airline stocks have looked like
attractive takeover targets. But with the United deal in
trouble, everyone started to wonder what other deals might not
go through."
</p>
<p> Nowhere was the shock greater than on Wall Street, where
some traders had left work early Friday to enjoy a balmy Indian
summer day. "I was on the floor until 2:30," said specialist
Stone. "The trading was so quiet that I decided to go home." But
by the time he got there shortly after 3, the damage was already
out of control. "I saw quite a bit of panic selling," said
Muriel Siebert, who heads a discount brokerage that bears her
name. UAL shares fell 5 1/2 points before trading in its stock
was halted because the number of sellers overwhelmed buyers.
Delta Air Lines, a frequently rumored takeover target, dropped
7 3/4.
</p>
<p> Some safeguards installed in the market after the 1987
crash may have helped cushion last week's fall. In Chicago the
Mercantile Exchange twice halted trading in S&P 500 futures
contracts, which represent the stocks in the Standard & Poor's
500 index. The automatic cutoffs, or "circuit breakers," slowed
the contracts' drop. In 1987 parallel free falls in New York
and Chicago, which are linked by computerized trading programs,
had aggravated the collapse. But last week some Chicago traders
claimed that the stoppages in futures trading restricted the
ability of some investors to hedge their losses, forcing them
to dump stocks and exacerbating the selling frenzy in Manhattan.
</p>
<p> Many investors, especially short-term speculators, were
badly shaken. The biggest losers were Wall Street arbitragers,
who make money by buying the stock of takeover targets and
selling it at a higher price when the deals go through. The high
anxiety about the junk-bond market sent the stocks of takeover
targets plunging across the board. "The arbs got their heads
handed to them," said Anson Beard, the chief trader for Morgan
Stanley. "Very few anticipated that the UAL buyout could fail."
Small investors suffered less because they have been less active
in the market since the 1987 crash.
</p>
<p> The market drop echoed around the world. In Tokyo, Noriko
Hama, a senior staffer at the Mitsubishi Research Institute,
warned that "it could be very hard to stop" the Wall Street
plunge from sending ripples through foreign stock exchanges.
Tokyo's volatile Nikkei index fell 445.02 points last Thursday,
its sharpest drop since June. The index rebounded 320.97 points
on Friday to close at 35,116.02, down 93.33 for the week.
</p>
<p> To many investors, the most disturbing aspect of the Wall
Street slide was its breathless speed. "We have a history of
market bubbles and panics," says Allen Sinai, chief economist
for the Boston Company Economic Advisors. "But because of the
advance in communications, corrections that used to take days,
weeks or months now take minutes. Any positive or negative
events get communicated in seconds." Sinai added that while "a
drop of 190 points is shocking and a source of great anxiety and
nervousness, it doesn't suggest that the sky is going to fall.
The lesson of 1987 is that financial markets often have a life
of their own."
</p>
<p> Brokerage houses rushed to convey a similar message to
their customers after the plunge. Merrill Lynch urged investors
to stay in the market for the long haul. The company recommended
that customers split their investments among Treasury bonds and
stocks of companies in such growing fields as health care and
pollution control. "Looking for the quick killing is one of the
surest ways of getting hurt in the stock market," says chairman
William Schreyer. "One of the things we encouraged our clients
to do after Oct. 19, 1987, was to stay with the market, think
long-term and get professional advice."
</p>
<p> Many investors seemed ready last week to stick with the
market for the long haul. John Markese, research director for
the Chicago-based American Association of Individual Investors,
said most of the group's 110,000 members "did nothing" after the
1987 crash, "and I suspect they will do nothing this time." In
San Francisco, investor Robert Simon said of Friday's drop, "It
tells me the market is overheated. I have been wary since 1987,"
Simon noted, "and I am more wary today." Nonetheless, he said,
he remained as heavily invested in stocks as he was two years
ago.
</p>
<p> Some market watchers viewed the drop as a signal of a
coming U.S. downturn. While the economy avoided a slump after
the 1987 crash, these moneymen fear that the U.S. may not be as
lucky again. "I believe a recession of some sort is imminent,"
says Richard Huebner, a senior vice president of the Hanifen,
Imhoff brokerage in Denver. "It didn't happen in 1987, but this
time the environment is changed. Our economy was overheated
then. This time it is slowing down, which makes recession more
likely. The market appears to be telling us that it is six to
nine months away."
</p>
<p> But other experts considered Friday's free fall to be far
less worrisome. Said James Wilcox, an associate professor of
business administration at the University of California,
Berkeley: "My own opinion is that the market was overvalued by
at least 200 points and that basically this is a reversion to
sanity. I look upon it as a breath of thoughtful fresh air."
Peter Lynch, manager of the $11 billion Fidelity Magellan fund,
was upbeat too. "America is not a basket case," Lynch said. "The
only thing that could bring a major decline is if inflation went
back into double digits."
</p>
<p> In Congress the stock drop rekindled fears of a financial
collapse that have flickered since the 1987 crash. Michigan
Democrat Donald Riegle, chairman of the Senate Banking
Committee, said the Friday decline might indicate "a marked
change in market psychology" about the value of stocks that
"would be a very important development, to say the least."
Riegle, who this month called for a Government study of the role
of junk bonds in leveraged buyouts, said the plunge indicated
that "there's a lot more at work here than the LBO story." But
a senior White House official insisted the drop simply reflected
"the falling through of the UAL deal." He added: "We're
confident the market will straighten itself out."
</p>
<p> Wall Street, Washington and investors around the world will
be watching the market with nervous anticipation to see whether
it can shake off its anxiety attack. The Federal Reserve will
monitor events carefully to determine whether it should come to
the rescue with a dose of easier money, as it did in 1987 to
restore confidence. One fervent hope was that high-rolling
investors would come roaring back into the market, looking for
bargains. But while it was easy to attribute last week's chiller
to everything from program trading to superstition about Friday
the 13th, there was a deeper message: confidence in the Stock
market will remain shaky as long as the U.S. economy rests on
a mountain of debt that neither politicians in Washington nor
business leaders on Wall Street seem willing to confront.
</p>
<p>--Bernard Baumaohl, Frederick Ungeheuer and Jane Van
Tassel/New York </p>
</body></article>
</text>