Black Monday 1987: The Largest Single-Day Crash in History
What Happened on Black Monday?
The crash didn’t emerge from a recession or economic crisis. The US economy was growing, corporate earnings were solid, and unemployment was low. Instead, Black Monday was a market structure failure — a cascade of automated selling that overwhelmed the system.
Markets had already been declining the week before. The DJIA fell 3.8% on October 14 and 4.6% on October 16. But nothing prepared traders for Monday morning, when sell orders flooded in before the opening bell.
By the close, the DJIA had dropped 508 points — from 2,247 to 1,739. The S&P 500 fell 20.5%. Globally, markets in Hong Kong, Australia, London, and Toronto saw drops of 20–45%.
What Caused Black Monday?
Portfolio insurance. Many institutional investors used a strategy called portfolio insurance — essentially automated selling triggered by price declines. When prices fell, the algorithms sold futures contracts, which pushed prices lower, which triggered more automated selling. It was a self-reinforcing feedback loop.
Program trading. Computerized trading systems executed large blocks of trades based on price differentials between stocks and futures. On Black Monday, these programs amplified selling pressure beyond anything the market could absorb.
Market illiquidity. Market makers and specialists — the firms responsible for providing liquidity — stepped back as the selling intensified. Many simply stopped answering their phones. Without buyers, prices went into free fall.
Global contagion. The crash started in Asian markets, spread to Europe, and hit the US with massive sell-at-open orders. For the first time, the interconnected global market amplified a crash in real time.
Timeline
| Date | Event | DJIA Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Oct 14, 1987 | Sharp decline on high volume | −3.8% |
| Oct 16, 1987 | Friday selloff; margin calls issued | −4.6% |
| Oct 19, 1987 | Black Monday — 604M shares traded | −22.6% (−508 points) |
| Oct 20, 1987 | Fed announces unlimited liquidity | +5.9% (partial recovery) |
| Oct 21, 1987 | Markets stabilize | +10.1% |
| Late 1987 | Circuit breakers proposed | New trading halt rules implemented |
| Aug 1989 | DJIA recovers to pre-crash levels | Full recovery in ~2 years |
The Fed’s Response
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, who had been in the job for only two months, issued a one-sentence statement the morning after the crash: the Federal Reserve affirms its readiness to serve as a source of liquidity.
This was critical. The Fed flooded the banking system with reserves, pressured banks to continue lending, and lowered interest rates. Unlike the response to the 1929 crash — where the Fed tightened — this aggressive easing prevented the market crash from becoming an economic crisis.
Black Monday vs. 1929 Crash
| Factor | Black Monday (1987) | 1929 Crash |
|---|---|---|
| One-day decline | −22.6% | −12% (Black Tuesday) |
| Total decline | −36% (peak to trough) | −89% (over 3 years) |
| Recovery time | ~2 years | 25 years |
| Primary cause | Portfolio insurance / program trading | Margin speculation |
| Fed response | Immediate liquidity injection | Tightened (made it worse) |
| Economic impact | Minimal — no recession | Triggered the Great Depression |
Lasting Impact and Reforms
Circuit breakers. The NYSE introduced trading halts — market-wide circuit breakers that pause trading when the S&P 500 drops 7%, 13%, or 20% in a single day. These are designed to interrupt the kind of feedback loops that caused Black Monday.
The Greenspan Put. The Fed’s aggressive response established the expectation that central banks would intervene during market crashes. This became known as the “Greenspan Put” — the implicit guarantee that the Fed would backstop markets. It influenced investor behavior for decades.
Regulation of program trading. Exchanges implemented restrictions on computerized trading during volatile periods, though these have been modified over time as markets evolved.
Key Takeaways
- Black Monday (October 19, 1987) saw the DJIA fall 22.6% — the largest one-day percentage drop in history.
- The crash was caused by automated portfolio insurance strategies creating a self-reinforcing selling cascade, not by economic fundamentals.
- The Fed’s immediate liquidity injection prevented the crash from becoming an economic crisis — a stark contrast to the 1929 response.
- Black Monday led to the creation of circuit breakers and increased scrutiny of program trading.
- The market recovered to pre-crash levels within approximately two years, with no accompanying recession.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much did the stock market fall on Black Monday?
The DJIA fell 508 points, or 22.6%, on October 19, 1987. The S&P 500 fell 20.5%. It remains the largest single-day percentage decline in US stock market history.
What caused Black Monday 1987?
The primary cause was portfolio insurance — automated trading strategies that sold stock futures when prices declined, creating a feedback loop. Combined with program trading and the withdrawal of market makers, this created a cascade of selling that overwhelmed the market’s ability to find buyers.
How long did it take to recover from Black Monday?
The DJIA recovered to its pre-crash levels by August 1989, approximately two years after the crash. The relatively quick recovery was aided by the Federal Reserve’s aggressive liquidity injection and the fact that the underlying economy remained healthy.
Did Black Monday cause a recession?
No. Despite the severity of the crash, the US economy continued growing. GDP was positive in 1987 and 1988, and the next recession didn’t arrive until 1990–91 (and was caused by different factors). This makes Black Monday unique among major crashes.
What are circuit breakers in stock markets?
Circuit breakers are trading halts triggered by large market declines. Created in response to Black Monday, they pause all trading when the S&P 500 drops 7% (Level 1), 13% (Level 2), or 20% (Level 3) in a single day. The goal is to prevent panic-driven feedback loops by giving participants time to reassess.