Current US Market Time (EST): Wednesday 22nd of February 2012 05:55:57 PM
Historical Stock Prices
16-02-2012 | By admin on 16-02-2012 | Category : News
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The history of stock markets goes back hundreds of years and historical stock prices have gone along with them hand in hand. Finding historic stock prices means searching back in time, possibly through years of fluctuations in the many different stock markets that exist around the world today. Historic stock prices generally coincide with peaks in economic recovery, disastrous events, and unique or unusual situations that have a profound impact on the world.

When one thinks of historical stock prices, the great stock market crash of 1929 usually comes to mind. During the post World War One era, the US entered an economic boom heretofore unseen in its history. The growing widespread wealth combined with industrial expansion, bringing higher wages and more consumer goods to a country that had, by the standards we set today, 90% of its population under the poverty line at the turn of the 20th century, to growing by leaps and bounds in the roaring 20′s. These historical stock prices were fueled by a concept known as margin buying, in which investors only put up a fraction of the money required to purchase stocks.

The concept of margin buying which is still common today, created historic stock prices in the late 1920′s when a number of small factors lead to dissolving confidence in the stock market. Suddenly, these historic stock prices took an unprecedented tumble and the result was the great crash in October, 1929. It remains the most explosive economic engine the US had ever experienced plummeted to earth in a matter of a few months. Now the historic stock prices reflected in the Great Depression of the 1920′s and 1930′s took over a decade to even begin to recover.

Historical stock prices are not regulated to our grandparent’s time. In the 1980′s the US experience another massive economic boom that helped strike down runaway inflation and double digit unemployment in a matter of a couple of years and expanded the stock market to regular people. What was once the bastion of investors and money market managers suddenly was filled with retirees whose retirement plans were based in part on the rise in the stock market. Such speculation fueled more historic stock prices as the overall average rose sharply from the below 2000 mark that was so common in previous decades. As confidence grew, the underpinnings of the historic stock prices were shaken loose in 1987 when the confidence of investors combined with slowing growth actually dropped that period of historical stock prices more in a single day than in any other day since the great crash of 1929.

Still, the robust economy of the US and the growing world market helped the stock market to recover from the lows of all the historical stock prices to rumble on steadily, with a few highs and lows as the market corrected itself from being overpriced to the situation that faces the world today. Historical stock prices will certainly be obtained again, but the current economic situation combined with mounting debt piled up by many Western European countries and the US could see prices fall as they have throughout the history of the existance of stock prices.


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