American Decades
Babson, Roger W. 1875-1967
PROGNOSTICATOR
Speculator, Forecaster.
Roger W. Babson, a market speculator, gained fame as one of the few—including Joseph P. Kennedy—who forecast the market crash in 1929. He is often regarded as the "father" of the long line of market prognosticators, newsletter publishers, and other purveyors of financial information who have flourished over the years.
Symbol.
In many ways Babson was symbolic of the extravagant era. He had been around Wall Street for years, but his background was never clear. He claimed to be an educator, philosopher, theologian, statistician, economist, and forecaster; he was clearly something of a con man. His forecasting methods, which involved charts, graphs, intersecting lines, and other hocus-pocus, were mysterious.
Predictions.
Earlier in the decade Babson had predicted that if New York governor Alfred E. Smith were elected president in 1928, there would almost...
[The entire page is 260 words long]
1920's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Carriers: Transportation
- Construction and Building
- Farms and Farmers
- Finance and Banking
- Government and Business
- Industry: The Aircraft
- Industry: The Automobile
- Industry: Radio and Broadcasting
- Labor: Workers and Unions
- The Modern Corporation
- Retail Trade and Marketing
- Speculation in Land: The Florida Boom and Crash
- The Stock Market: Boom
- The Stock Market: Crash
- The Stock Market: Effects of the Crash
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1920–1929
