Alright, hey guys. Today we're going to learn about the staffer rooms. You guys can look at this sheet, get it ready. It is double-sided tape. You need a computer or a phone. Look back on these questions with your groups. I want you guys to discuss these four questions. So what is this? What does it mean to have to stop? What makes the stock price go up? Why did people buy stocks? And then I want you guys to look at the company, determine what their stock prices now, in determining what it was five years ago or a year ago, I just want you guys to compare how stock prices like change. And what does it mean to so many brands like two or 3 min a share? You said systems like Sharpie Sharpie, percentage. My heart rate was about race and about credit. Yeah. I would say your bodies on the ground, don't really share. What does that mean? Everybody? Good. I didn't want to price the price of the share. Whatever has a USB, an extra 73, 76 months before the slash Valley. Are you guys good? Yes. Alright. Who can tell me what a stock is? A share of a company? Yeah, so that's perfect. So basically, when you own a stock, your own name or the portion of the stock price go up? Man or utility. Yeah. So usually the easiest way to explain this, as well as more people are buying stock. Stock is more valuable than like if less people are buying and more people are selling. You guys know, like why people buy stocks? What's the incentive for a lot of people? Company is doing well, you can ever return exactly. So return on investments like the key idea here. So for the ideas that he buys stock for $5, hopefully in five years I completely, I have grown exponentially and that $5 stock will now be worth $20. What Safavids, you guys look up. Problems. Apple. Stock price today, 173. What was it? Three years ago, it was $72.05 years was $47. So if you invested in Apple five-years ago, do you think you would have a return on your investment? Dollars? Good job. We did McDonald's. This one is very expensive. Today, is 200, $0.90, 2020 to 2020 100. Right? Now. Sorry, I'm sorry. Who wanted to sell it? And then it's less value. What does it mean to buy on credit? So awesome alone. You're buying but money didn't really have a promise to pay it back. Yeah. Exactly. Like if you guys remember, like say you went to the grocery store on Thursday and you don't get paid until Friday and you don't have any money for your groceries, so you put it on your credit card, you get paid back, pay your credit card. Right? So we've talked about what a stock or any crash, actually. That fun stuff. A sudden drop in stock prices and insignificant loss of paper wealth. And stock market crashes usually include panic selling are preceded by a period of decline. So that's pretty much what happened in 1929, the stock market crash, what we're talking about today. So there's many different things that lead up to the stock market crash, many different causes. So we're just gonna look at some of the important vocabulary you can take notes on the back of that sheet if you flip it over. I think there's five Black Tuesday. That was the actual day of the stock market crash. So it's October 29, 1929. And notice that it's doctrine. Another important vocab is the Dow Jones Industrial Average. That's a popular stock market index that indicates the market overall direction of the 1929, the Dow Jones started going down and people started selling their stocks. Buying if the margin, this was a big cause of the crash in 1929. That's basically people buying on credit. They were borrowing money from a broker to purchase a stock. And then when the stock went down, they couldn't pay back that money. They had borrowed. Overproduction, That's the excess supply that over demand for Kronos. So there was just a lot of production happening. Especially after the First World We're live production just kept happening. And people were not buying a lot of things. And then laissez faire, that's another important word. It's on economic policy of minimal government interference. Lazy Bear translates literally, let you do. So. The government was kinda hands off kinda policy. They were letting the market do what they wanted. And everything was really like unregulated, which led to the crash teeth. But it does anyone need more time to look at this vocab? I see a few people still writing, so I'll give you another piece. Definitely a question for you guys. If you can get out on replaces either a laptop or a phone on Canvas, there's a link to a Google form like Brian, you've already won. And then you're just going to answer this question on your phone. You think that government should interfere with this, mark it or not. And why? Be sure to include at least one vocabulary term that you used today. And if you need to actually go back to that slide with all the vocab depression is also listed on here, Google form. So I'll give you guys a couple minutes to do that. And I'll just look around and make sure everyone's stuff. Yes. The Google form is It's on Canvas under modules. Oh, yeah. It's on the Google pharmacy. One more minute. Okay. Okay. We just have a question I'm going to talk about with your groups though after you're finished up with that Google Form, you can put your devices when you talk about this in your firm, in a round robin, is buying on margin a high risk investments. What are the potential outcome? And then you ready to share out which pixel on your vertical shift or something. You guys can have a couple of minutes to do that. You can find a lot of money. Yeah, I know. You're into writing. Like how much you're listening, you're done. So much. I do not know how to do that. Hello everyone. I'm going to come back together. I brought here from this group to share out that it is a high-risk investment because we're borrowing money back. Where are the potential outcomes? I think you can like conflate the stock price because if you have the people purchasing that they use a broker and they're not really the investor. So it's just complaining. One last time. You didn't have that. You could lose out bedtime. The song doesn't do well. Next, we're going to talk about some of the residents who were in power at that time. So I think there's a thought on your paper, you can write them. In 1929 in the stock market actually crashed. Herbert Hoover was the president. And he didn't like the government, is not going to mean that the market, he didn't believe that government intervention, he was opposed to federal program. And so he thought everything would just work itself out on his own. And this led to rising anxieties among the general population. And unemployment rates began rising as after the stock market crashed, it peaked in 1933 at 24.9%. The stock market in the overall economy was just really bad and the government not doing anything about it, just kinda work. So why do you think the government got involved after the crash? I think that they probably got involved after the crash because they saw that doing nothing was I'm hoping that it would just naturally fix itself wasn't working very well. So they figured they would give intervening in this situation a shot. I guess, whether or not it worked extremely well, let's just paint over it. Then. We have a short video here about Herbert Hoover and how he responded to this current day. I would leave. Let's help you make your mark. I recall is your satisfaction. Let us show you the way. In keeping with these principles, Hoover's response to the crash focused on two very common American traditions. He asked individuals to tighten their belts and work harder. And he asked the business community to voluntarily help sustain economy by retaining workers and continuing production. Let's help you make your mark. Assuming the presidency at the depth of the Great Depression, Franklin D Roosevelt, healthy American people, regain faith in themselves. He brought hope as you harvest prime vigorous. And asserted in his inaugural address, the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Let's help you make your mark. It began after the stock market crash of October 1920, 9% walls into and wiped out millions of investors. Over the next several years, consumer spending and investment fox hunting steep declines in industrial output and employment is failing companies. They are workers. Let's help you make your mark. While the October 1929 soft targets, the Great Depression, multiple factors turned it into a decade long economic catastrophe. Overproduction, executive inaction, it'll times terrorists and an inexperienced Federal Reserve all contributed to the Great Depression. Thank you. Said after you foreshadowed. Next, we'll be talking about FDR. He took the office after Herbert Hoover and to office in 1933. At the time when he took office, people were not happy with how things were going and FTR was able to give the people, which is a big part of how he won the election in 1932. He promised change, which was something people were really looking for, that Hoover did not provide the countries. In his first hundred days of office, he introduced several key pieces of legislation that passed. This was all part of the New Deal, which you guys have probably heard of in a history class in the past. One part of that legislation that was passed in 100 days because the FDIC insurance is part of the Banking Act of 1933. And this act protects the money that will deposit and veins a certain amount. I think at the time it was $5,000, which today is equivalent to 250 thousands. You can get that back sugar like stock or something crash. It is protected by the government. Deciding to do this is like a big change from what we saw for Hoover. Hoover had this really big like hands-off approach and we just fix itself where it's like after few years of that happening. And then finally Roosevelt took office. He said, that's not enough. We have to do something different. So he didn't list, it was changed how everyone There's just a picture of FDR and he actually ended up being president for over ten years. Here's another question. Can you discuss as a class, what were the goals of New Deal legislation? All right. Any volunteers San, rejuvenate the economy for social programs to determine faith in the banking system. Yeah, we're trying to fake. It was a big one. People didn't trust the government after Hoover didn't do anything. So FDR was really trying to change that. Here's just a couple of questions you can discuss with your table for a few minutes to share out. Now, let's talk about the bathroom. While the American Council on Foreign for uncovering the whole system was based around the trust that there's no trust. Okay. How did FDIC insurance, health insurance from either putting their money and thanks again. Yeah. So after the whole stock market crash and years of Hoover doing nothing really to help the American people know and trust in the bank. So I don't know if any of you guys might have heard your grandparents tell you what. Money under their beds are like money in the backyard. Like people literally did not trust banks because when the stock market crashed, everyone brands the veins to try to take their money out. The bank was like, we actually don't have it because we invested all of it. So people lost everything. And Hoover wasn't because of his hands-off approach. She wasn't trying to really help people. So after years of life suffering no interests in the bank. So Roosevelt thought with FDIC insurance and people were guaranteeing their money back from giving us the banks. People would actually go to the bank again and start facilitating the Hoover Roosevelt philosophies differ. Israel hands-off, glossy. Apparently you don't want anybody. But the economy didn't need to be yesterday. And so Roosevelt, he did. Yeah, exactly. There's, even in politics today, there's kind of like an approach where humans are more hands-off. They're more for moments of laissez faire economics like Hoover, whereas Democrats are more hands. One more branch of relations. They want like more. Say, the difference is Roosevelt's to implement these programs. Whereas Hoover was more hands-off, more in line with their party's ideas. Right? So I just want you guys to stop. What do you think was more impactful social or political events that you guys can discuss with your brush. Like the Florida. I didn't want to touch on the social war. That's when more impactful in the future, you can get money back. But who lost their kids can't get those feelings of untrustworthiness in the bank for regeneration. Like when my grandma died, when we got money in her house because she thinks anyone would say. So. Yes. I think the political martin faculty doesn't sound like a precedent. Precedent that the government could intervene and economical matters a lot more often. Yeah, So that's a really good point is the big word, but he said his precedent. So in software to crash like stuff is precedence than the federal government was not going to completely off say fair. They were going to step in when economic crashes happened. It also sent the FDIC insurance, which still exists today. And this program is why a lot of people starting to put him back. Okay. So I just want you guys to go up as Mentimeter. Despite there being shown to crash, middle-income americans continued besting their savings today. Why do you think many people still invest inspect potential negative outcome? Yeah, so people have more money, more money to lobby for, willing to lose some money in the long run. Because of the light from responsibility. And I'm assuming that has to do with like putting money, maybe refreshing a drug. That doesn't work. You can use. There are usually safer socks and almost guaranteed. Yeah, There's a fierce actually jobs where people will be like you should invest in this. And those people are usually right. Why people can tell you, like which stocks are guaranteed to do well and what's not guaranteed to not do well. Your own destiny with gambling. That's actually a really good point and I didn't think you have a gambling addiction. You would probably love to some positive outcomes outweigh the negative outcomes through and people will follow the investment of hope that they will get their money back. And very true. Alright. Now we're gonna play games. Who doesn't love a game? The game, You guys are going to work in your groups. Two pages. Start reading instructions. I'll rebuild. $20. Was my 15th. Right? I'm a bank. I want you guys to pretend that you've got $50 here for all of your savings and the other $50, you are going to try to make a return on your $50 by investing in one of these four companies. You have $50. You can buy as many stocks as you want as long as we don't exceed 50. So you can buy one ends on. So what happened was when to take top stocks as long as it doesn't exceed it. So I put an example. So my example, I bought one stock company undergo in one stock at the current stock price of banana is 20. And then when I flip the next slide, you're going to see what the stock price became. So then you'll subtract your profit or not. For right now, you guys need to do is fill out company name, what soccer version thing, and how many, and then what the current stock price is. These two blank until we put it all into one. All right, good. I see some people already tell you to do this, right? Alright. I hope you didn't buy Amazon or you stop decreasing rate for assault with a company loses sales, increases $10 after they undergo you're on track, race $30 and Nike stock increases $20 after a successful brand new WNBA player, South brace now $60. Tiktok increases $30 after your advertising, you can using more ambulances for grandiose chunk right now. So to calculate, if you're making, based on your knowledge, you're taking the new stock price and subtracting it from the old ones. You lost money. Because right now I'm writing it. Dies. I'm going to try to remind me, how would you calculate how much money you're not going to save this new stock price for all those and then invest again. So there's four quarters in a year. So this was the result of quarter one. So we're gonna go through the quarter. Five extra credit points. Good morning. All right. Wait. We're going to wrap around the corner to type Alex for sharing your story. Again, stock price for Apple stock increases. 21st sheriff on policing and new iPhone stopped very sticky. Nike Under Armour campaign. Successful Under Armour campaign. Stock price $50, fixed hot spot degrees by $30 in the US Congress attempts to ban the app is not present. Now. You've probably noticed. Yeah. All right. You guys are calculating using the new stock price. And then once the candidate, you can take that new stock price and then invest for quarter three. All right. No, no. I'm good. Amazon, Apple 20 1910, TikTok zero. Because I want you guys to calculate this real quick and then we'll talk about it and you turn a profit if you didn't have botch currently intended. What does everyone think? Everyone's probably adapt? Yeah, we don't take time. Raise your hand if you wanted to talk about what dryer to be there. Alright? If you lost money in the market again, are already hesitant. Why or why not? I'm just attempt because I have no idea I was going to crash. Missouri monkey. Yeah, It just crashed and we had 110 and we bought TikTok enemy lost $30. I don't want it to crash. Well, I lost my money, so I need some way to crash. Think if this happened in real life, you still get to go for break your mortgage food? No. Okay. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So yeah, this is like what we were talking about earlier with like social implications of unemployment when exorbitantly high rate to tell you that things were after the crash, no one had jobs. Barbara was like literally just living in tents. And I would rather live on personal street then it's up for parking. So the summary is not going to do that. Alright? So now we have an independent activity. We're going to pass out to you guys. I will read you the prompt. Yeah. We're going to do this kind of Valli case studies. If you are a senator or the state of California in 23, you get a call from a colleague that you are being spun into an emergency meeting because the silicons in Santa Clara is on the verge of collapse. We were informed that interest rates were increased to continue the natural cycle of the borrowing system. But once these great for increased investor to pull their money from the bank, we are now on the verge of a potential stock market crash. Answer the following two questions as if you were a Californian, each question should warrant that three to five sentence responses. How you as a legislator attempts to remedy this situation. What's the current social and or cultural impatient for the potential crash have on the American public. Just write out your answers on your own. More space. There's more lines. You guys are finishing up that individual assignment. Take a look at this first question here. Can you draw the stock market crash of 1929 and the reason crash at the California today. I'll give you guys about 30 s to think about that. Well, people are finishing up their individual assignments and then I'll get some volunteers. Anyone want to answer Our first question there? Yeah. So there was a similar rush pyplot money from the bank That's distress created. Right? Alright. I just finish up those written assignments. If you didn't already have, we will collect those and hang on to your notes. I guess just put the other paper in a folder too.
010 Riley Marley Stock Market Crash Videocamera Version
From Carol Wong May 08, 2023
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