CORNERING THE MARKET
13. To corner the market is to offer to buy and be prepared to carry out your offer, for an amount more than is offered for sale, thus causing the price to advance. Sometimes this is done by large operators to their advantage and sometimes, in spite of their large purchases, which encourage a rising market, the prices fall before their deals are consummated, and they are left high and dry with a considerable loss instead of a large profit. The bull who tries to run a corner has a strong foretaste of what it means to advance sensationally, a staple article of consumption. Stocks and bonds may be hoisted ever so high; real estate may be boomed to far beyond its intrinsic or even potential worth—the public has no objection; the process is, in fact, rather pleasing to it. A lift in cereals or cotton above the normal lines encounters many protests and the higher the lift, the more savage the protest. This of course does not include the farmer or planter, unless he has disposed of his output; then he willingly enough joins the chorus of protestation.