1066 1776 1914 2008 1929
It is impossible to think of 1066, 1776 or 1914 without recalling the wars and revolutions that changed the world for ever.
And two years are remembered for the worst financial crashes: 2008 and 1929.
Andrew Ross Sorkin, a journalist at the New York Times, chronicled the turmoil of 2008 in “Too Big to Fail”, which was published in 2009 and
adapted into a film in 2011.
Now, with “1929”, he has turned his attention to the seminal stockmarket and banking crash of modern history, to which all others are inevitably compared.
The Depression that followed endured until America entered the second world war.
1933 the Glass-Steagall Act separated the activities of commercial and investment banks.
The Economist 15 October 2025
The Glass-Steagall regulations separating investment and commercial banks were introduced by Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, repealed by Bill Clinton in 1999,
partially reintroduced in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act that followed the 2008 Lehman Brothers meltdown.
Crash of 1929 - It was FOMO plus debt. It’s almost always FOMO plus debt
Den 14 oktober år 1066, utkämpades ett av historiens mest kända slag, då normanderna under Vilhelm Erövraren krossade den anglosaxiska hären vid Hastings.
Dick Harrison SvD 14 oktober 2025

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