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Company NameCORE16 Inc.
CEODavid Cho
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officePhone070-4225-0201
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article
박재훈투영인 프로필 사진박재훈투영인
Dollar Bill On Floor Sends Wall Street Into Frenzy(October 22, 2008)
created At: 2/12/2025
Strong Sell
Strong Sell
This analysis strongly recommends selling due to identified risk factors. Please review the details carefully before making a decision.
133690
Mirae Asset TIGER NASDAQ100 ETF
226490
Samsung KODEX KOSPI ETF
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Fact
A $1 bill was spotted on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) trading floor at 12:05 p.m., sparking excitement among traders. Traders reacted with enthusiasm, with reports of shouting, arm-flailing, and even a dog pile forming around the bill. A new publicly traded asset, DLR, emerged, with over 60,000 shares traded in response to the discovery. The dollar bill's estimated net worth skyrocketed to $270 million by the end of the trading day. The Dow surged 993 points, marking its largest gain in history. Some investors speculated wildly, with reports of individuals willing to pay $85 for an option to see the bill the next day. Microsoft’s CFO, Chris Liddell, unknowingly walked around with the bill stuck to his shoe, further fueling market optimism. Speculation extended to Europe, where analysts pointed to a German student who still had credit available as a sign of potential financial stability.
Opinion
This article is clearly satire, exaggerating the absurdity of market reactions to financial optimism. It highlights the fragility of investor sentiment, where even the smallest sign of liquidity or economic hope—like spotting a single dollar—can spark irrational exuberance. The parallels to real-life financial bubbles are striking: traders and analysts have often latched onto weak or symbolic indicators to justify market rallies. The Dow’s massive gain of 993 points over a meaningless event underscores the dangers of emotional investing and speculative bubbles. If investors are willing to assign a $270 million valuation to a crumpled bill, it’s a stark warning of how detached the market can become from economic reality. Wild speculation, herd mentality, and misplaced confidence in trivial signals can create short-lived booms, but the inevitable crash will be brutal when reality sets in.
Core Sell Point
Irrational optimism is a dangerous game—when speculation replaces fundamentals, a crash is never far behind.

Wall Street investors experienced a sudden surge in optimism Tuesday when, after six tumultuous weeks that saw record drops in the Dow Jones industrial average, a $1 bill was spotted on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

The dollar bill was discovered in the northwest corner of the trading floor at approximately 12:05 p.m., and its condition was reported as “crinkled, but real.” Word of the tangible denomination of U.S. currency spread quickly across the NYSE, sending traders into a frenzied rush of shouting, arm-flailing, hooting, hollering, and, according to eyewitnesses, at least one dog pile.

“With credit frozen and the commercial paper market poised on the brink of collapse, this is the most promising development I’ve seen on Wall Street in months,” said floor trader Tim Formato, one of hundreds who gathered around the $1 bill and excitedly called their clients to inform them that they were looking at actual U.S. tender. “I think I touched it.”

According to witnesses, the trading floor was soon abuzz with energy, as traders pointed at the dollar and repeatedly shouted “Look!” and “Money!” A proposal to divide the $1 note into 1,300 equal pieces and distribute them amongst investors was considered, but ultimately rejected. Early reports estimate the dollar may have passed through as many as 65 hands before disappearing in the late afternoon.

The bill’s absence, however, did not deter the growing enthusiasm from those on the trading floor. By 2:15 p.m., more than 60,000 shares had beenpurchased in the new publicly traded asset, DLR, after brokers placed a flurry of calls advising their investors to buy into the booming single-dollar market.

By the close of day, economists were estimating the dollar bill’s net worth at just under $270 million.

“We couldn’t be in a better situation right now,” trader Patrick Kady said. “Unless of course it had been a euro.”

However, some financial advisers are warning against the rampant speculation the dollar has caused on Wall Street. Many have cautioned investors not to make rash decisions, such as liquidating all their low-risk government bonds in order to sniff the green paper bill for just a minute.

“I bet it smells like rose petals,” mutual funds specialist Ken Stoute said. “My friend’s friend Tim Formato? He’s on the board at Westminster Securities and he says he touched it. He said it was warm and soft and wonderful. He said he knows where it is now, and I can put in an option on seeing it tomorrow for only $85.”

Since the appearance of the dollar, the Dow has spiked an impressive 993 points—its largest gain ever. Initial numbers are showing the most sizable rises in technology stocks, a trend some are attributing to Microsoft’s CFO Chris Liddell, who toured the trading floor Tuesday morning with the bill stuck to his left shoe.
The overall projection for the market following the incident has been positive, with many analysts claiming that the $1 bill may be an indication of other spare change lying around. This, coupled with reports out of Europe that there is a German college student who has not yet hit her credit card limit this month, could be enough to stabilize the Dow and jump-start the global economy once again.

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