On Monday’s Wall Street crash:
- Share via
“I expected it somewhat earlier, and not for economic reasons--but for aesthetic and moral reasons. The last two years were just too disgusting a spectacle. Pigs gorging themselves at the trough are always a disgusting spectacle, and you know it won’t last long.”
--Peter F. Drucker,
a professor at Claremont Graduate School and a pioneer in the study of modern management
“It was a financial meltdown as good as any that has come along.”
--John Phelan,
chairman of the New York Stock Exchange
“There’s too much money chasing too few stocks managed by 28-year-old boys paid $500,000 a year who don’t know what they’re doing.”
--H. Ross Perot,
chairman of Electronic Data Systems
“What we have is an economic crisis of international proportions.”
--John D. Connolly,
chairman of the investment policy committee of Dean Witter Reynolds
“I think everyone is a little puzzled. I don’t know what meaning it might have because all the business indices are up. There is nothing wrong with the economy.”
--President Reagan
“I’m very nervous about tomorrow. This may be the end of the yuppie era.”
--Michael Meer,
a broker and trader for Haas Securities in New York
“1929 looks like small potatoes compared to what happened this week.”
--I.W. (Tubby) Burnham II,
honorary chairman of the Drexel Burnham Lambert brokerage firm
“I slept like a baby (Monday night). I woke up every hour and cried.”
--George Lefferts,
Equitable Financial Services manager, San Diego.
“This is going to frighten off a lot of small investors and quite a few big ones, too. I suspect there will be a substantially more cautious approach to investing after this.”
--John Kenneth Galbraith,
Harvard economist
“It’s paper anyway. It was paper when we started and it’s paper afterward.”
--Sam Walton,
chairman of Wal-Mart Stores, whose personal stock holdings declined by about half a billion dollars Monday.
More to Read
Inside the business of entertainment
The Wide Shot brings you news, analysis and insights on everything from streaming wars to production — and what it all means for the future.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.