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INVESTMENT
FLASH: AH, THE SUMMER OF 1929!
by Paul J. Lamont
July 24, 2007
“As
the advertisements in the Ladies Home Journal declare, “This is a
sun-worshipping year….all the world has gone in for sun-tan.” (Since
Yesterday by Fredrick Lewis Allen.) The July 6th 1929
cover of The Saturday Evening Post would also agree:

The ‘Bob’ Indicator
This
year, Victoria Beckham, Hollywood’s new ‘it’ girl (pictured
below), has a style reminiscent of the overly tan short-haired woman
from the summer of 1929. Late last year, she and pop singer Rihanna
returned to the ‘bob’ hairstyle, made famous in the 1920s. It
is now fashionable in the U.S. and U.K. The ‘bob’ also appeared
in the early 1960’s in the final stages of that boom after being
reintroduced by a young hairstylist named Vidal Sassoon.

The Peak
Continuing
with a quote from Since Yesterday, we have overlaid recent news
links with Allen’s description of September 3, 1929, (the day the
Great Bull Market peaked) to complete the historical/economic metaphor:
“You
will not be able to go far, in the central part of any of the big
cities, without hearing the deafening clatter of riveters, for
although the Florida boom went
to pieces in 1926, and the boom in suburban developments-which has
been filling up the open spaces in the outskirts of the cities with
Cotswold Terraces and Rosemont Groves and Woodmere Drives-has
been lagging since 1927, the boom in apartment-house construction
and particularly in office-building
construction is still going full tilt. Not in the poorer districts
are the riveters noisiest, but at the
centers of big business and of
residential wealth, for it is the holders
and manipulators of securities who are the chief beneficiaries of
this last speculative phase
of Coolidge-Hoover prosperity.”
Credit Crunch
As
shown in our latest (subscribers-only) Investment
Analysis Report: Credit Downturn Force Feeds Wall Street Banks With
Losses, the credit crunch that we have been warning about has begun.
Bloomberg
News recently produced a video that provides sobering commentary on
the outlook of the credit market. As the credit crunch spreads, forced
selling and unwinding of leverage on assets will occur.
History Homework
Only
Yesterday: An Informal History of the 1920’s by Fredrick Lewis
Allen is provided online by the American Studies at the University of
Virginia. We highly recommend reading Chapters 11 through 14, which
detail the Florida real estate bubble in 1926 and the stock market
bubble of 1929.

©
2007 Paul J. Lamont
Editorial
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Contact
Information
Paul J. Lamont
Lamont Trading Advisors, Inc.
502 Bank Street
Decatur, AL 35601
Tel/Fax: (256) 850-4161
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