The_Markets_During_Kennedys_Assassination
| The Markets During Kennedys Assassination
Money Matters The Markets During Kennedy’s Assassination
November 22, 2003 Presented by The Money Management Firm, Inc.
www.moneymanagementfirm.com eBay ID: optionsforyou
_________________________________________ New Improved
Lawnmowers One day a lawyer was riding in his limousine when he
saw a guy eating grass. He told the driver to stop. He got out
and asked him, "Why are you eating grass?" The man replied, "I'm
so poor, I can't afford a thing to eat." So the lawyer said,
"Poor guy, come back to my house." The guy then said, "But I
have a wife and three kids." The lawyer told him to bring them
along. When they were all in the car, the poor man said, "Thanks
for taking us back to your house, it is so kind of you." The
lawyer said, "You're going to love it there, the grass is a foot
tall." _________________________________________ Fifty-eight
percent of Americans weren’t born when President John F. Kennedy
was assassinated on November 22, 1963. I’m in the minority; I
can remember his funeral. The stock market had been in rally
mode since the end of the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962.
From that time until the end of October 1963, the Dow Jones
Industrial Average gained 35%. Then, in early November, stocks
started falling, due in large part to the coup in South Vietnam.
The United States’ involvement in that war was just starting to
heat up; we had sent thousands of military advisors (but no
combat troops) to the country. Many former administration
officials say Kennedy didn’t like South Vietnam’s leader and
didn’t lift a finger to help him when the coup started. That set
the tone for much of the month. Stocks traded quietly in the
early hours of November 22. Then, when the first reports of the
shooting came to the exchange just after 1:30 eastern time,
stocks started selling off, as they often do during major world
crises. Less than one-half hour later, when Kennedy’s death was
confirmed, the sell-off accelerated. By the end of the day, the
Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 2.89% of its value. As
calamitous as the assassination was, its effects did not linger
in the stock market. By the end of 1963, stocks had recovered
all of their November losses. Six months after the
assassination, the Dow Jones index was 12.04% higher. One year
after the event, the index was up 21.58%. The world event with
the most impact on stocks was the terrorist attacks of September
11, 2001. When stocks resumed trading on the following Monday,
the index lost 7.12% of its value.
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keep the website links. Have a happy Thanksgiving.
http://www.moneymanagementfirm.com
About the author:
John Finger has been investing and trading for more than 20
years. He runs a subscription-based website and offers both free
and paid eBooks, as well as a free newsletter, Money Matters, at
his website, www.moneymanagementfirm.com.
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