In the twentieth century, the New York Exchange ran into more issues than in the prior century. In 1920, at the corner of Wall Street and Broad Street and near the exchange itself, a horse cart packed with explosives detonated. It was the lunch hour and the streets of Manhattan were packed with all manner of persona. When all the dust settled, the market was fixed within days and 39 people had died [7]. It was a symbol of the market’s growing importance as a possible scapegoat for economic troubles in popular culture. Less than ten years after the tragic bombing the Stock Exchange and the general stock market hit the most difficult period in history