Everything about Black Monday 1987 totally explained
In financial markets,
Black Monday is the name given to
Monday,
October 19,
1987, when
stock markets around the world 'crashed', shedding a huge value in a very short period. The crash began in
Hong Kong, spread west through international
time zones to
Europe, hitting the United States after other markets had already declined by a significant margin. The
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) dropped by 508 points to 1739 (22.6%).
By the end of October, stock markets in
Hong Kong had fallen 45.8%,
Australia 41.8%,
Spain 31%, the
United Kingdom 26.4%, the
United States 22.68%, and
Canada 22.5%.
New Zealand's market was hit especially hard, falling about 60% from its 1987 peak, and taking several years to recover. (The terms
Black Monday and
Black Tuesday are also applied to
October 28 and 29,
1929, which occurred after
Black Thursday on
October 24, which started the
Stock Market Crash of 1929. Confusingly, in Australia the 1987 crash is also referred to as Black Tuesday because of the timezone difference)
The Black Monday decline was the largest one-day percentage decline in
stock market history. Other large declines have occurred after periods of market closure, such as Saturday,
December 12,
1914, when the DJIA fell 24.39%, ending the four month closure due to the outbreak of the
First World War, and Monday,
September 17,
2001, the first day that the market was open following the
September 11, 2001 attacks.
Interestingly, the DJIA was positive for the 1987 calendar year. It opened on
January 2,
1987, at 1,897 points and would close on
December 31st,
1987, at 1,939 points. The DJIA wouldn't regain its
August 25,
1987 closing high of 2,722 points until almost two years later.
A degree of mystery is associated with the 1987 crash, and it has been labeled as a
black swan event. Important assumptions concerning
human rationality, the
efficient market hypothesis, and
economic equilibrium were brought into question by the event. Debate as to the cause of the crash still continues many years after the event, with no firm conclusions reached.
In the wake of the crash, markets around the world were put on restricted trading primarily because sorting out the orders that had come in was beyond the computer technology of the time. This also gave the
Federal Reserve and other central banks time to pump
liquidity into the system to prevent a further downdraft. While pessimism reigned, the market bottomed on
October 20.
Timeline
In 1986, the
United States economy began shifting from a rapidly growing recovery to a slower growing expansion, which resulted in a "
soft landing" as the economy slowed and
inflation dropped. The stock market advanced significantly, with the Dow peaking in August 1987 at 2722 points, or 44% over the previous year's closing of 1985 points.
On October 14, the DJIA dropped 95.46 points (a then record) to 2412.70, and fell another 58 points the next day, down over 12% from the August 25 all-time high. On Friday, October 16, the DJIA closed down another 108.35 points to close at 2246.74 on record volume. Treasury Secretary
James Baker stated concerns about the falling prices. That weekend many investors worried over their stock investments.
The crash began in Far Eastern markets the morning of October 19. Later that morning, two U.S. warships shelled an Iranian oil platform in the Persian Gulf.
Causes
Potential causes for the decline include
program trading,
overvaluation,
illiquidity, and
market psychology.
The most popular explanation for the 1987 crash was selling by program traders. U.S. Congressman
Edward J. Markey, who had been warning about the possibility of a crash, stated that "Program trading was the principal cause."
In
program trading, computers perform rapid stock executions based on external inputs, such as the price of related securities. Common strategies implemented by program trading involve an attempt to engage in
arbitrage and
portfolio insurance strategies. The trader
Paul Tudor Jones predicted and profited from the crash, attributing it to portfolio insurance derivatives which were "an accident waiting to happen" and that the "crash was something that was imminently forecastable". Once the market started going down, the writers of the derivatives were "forced to sell on every down-tick" so the "selling would actually cascade instead of dry up".
As computer technology became more available, the use of program trading grew dramatically within
Wall Street firms. After the crash, many blamed program trading strategies for blindly selling stocks as markets fell, exacerbating the decline. Some
economists theorized the
speculative boom leading up to October was caused by program trading, while others argued that the crash was a return to
normalcy. Either way, program trading ended up taking the majority of the blame in the public eye for the 1987 stock market crash.
New York University's Richard Sylla divides the causes into macroeconomic and internal reasons. Macroeconomic causes included international disputes about
foreign exchange and
interest rates, and fears about inflation.
The internal reasons included innovations with index futures and portfolio insurance. I've seen accounts that maybe roughly half the trading on that day was a small number of institutions with portfolio insurance. Big guys were dumping their stock. Also, the futures market in Chicago was even lower than the stock market, and people tried to arbitrage that. The proper strategy was to buy futures in Chicago and sell in the New York cash market. It made it hard -- the portfolio insurance people were also trying to sell their stock at the same time.
Economist
Richard Roll believes the international nature of the stock market decline contradicts the argument that program trading was to blame. Program trading strategies were used primarily in the United States, Roll writes. Markets where program trading wasn't prevalent, such as Australia and Hong Kong, wouldn't have declined as well, if program trading was the cause. These markets might have been reacting to excessive program trading in the United States, but Roll indicates otherwise. The crash began on
October 19 in Hong Kong, spread west to
Europe, and hit the United States only after Hong Kong and other markets had already declined by a significant margin.
Another common theory states that the crash was a result of a dispute in monetary policy between the
G-7 industrialized nations, in which the United States, wanting to prop up the dollar and restrict inflation, tightened policy faster than the Europeans. The crash, in this view, was caused when the dollar-backed Hong Kong stock exchange collapsed, and this caused a crisis in confidence.
Jude Wanniski stated that the crash happened because of the breakup of the
Louvre Accord, a monetary pact between the US, Japan, and
West Germany to keep currencies stable. Just prior to the crash,
Alan Greenspan had said that the dollar would be devalued.
Further Information
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