Email:
Password:
Register

Knowledgerush Search

 


Search for images of Stock exchange

Community Members

Smallykins

Coach Ke…

ceilo-de…

anisha

dev485

Raja.k

moosh

lolly

crickett…
Welcome Publish Image - Publish Soapbox - Publish Poem
My Stuff - Add Image to My Profile - Edit My Profile
Message Boards - Post a New Topic
All Poems - All Soapbox

Stock exchange

A stock exchange is an organization of brokers and investment bankers which has the purpose of providing the facilities for trade of company stocks and other financial instruments--usually a central location and recordkeeping. Trade on an exchange is by members only; one is said to "have a seat" on the exchange. In Europe, stock exchanges are often called bourses. The trading of stock on stock exchanges is called the stock market.

Companies have to meet the requirements of the exchange in order to have their offerings listed and traded there. To get/be/stay(?) listed on the NYSE (New York Stock Exchange), for example, a company must have issued at least a million shares of stock worth $16 mil and must have more than $2.5 million net income (1998 requirements).

Since the crash of 1929, brokers on American exchanges have had the obligation to assure an orderly and fair market by intervening when the price of a stock seems to be rising or falling too fast. See Stock market for practical discussion of what is bought and sold and how.

The NASDAQ (National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation System) is not an exchange in this sense. It is an ongoing computer record of stock quotes (current buy and sell prices) for a large number of companies. Brokers can use these quotes to guide them in filling their clients' orders.

The NASD also has a quotation system for the stocks of smaller companies, which is called the OTC(Over the Counter) Bulletin Board. A company does not have to meet very high standards to be listed there, although the NASD has since January 1999 required that listees at least file current financial information with the SEC or other regulatory agencies. (The National Quotation Bureau publishes weekly "pink sheets" of trade information about stocks of 3,600 or so companies that do not even meet the listing requirements of the OTC Bulletin Board.) Now, many of the companies listed in these secondary sources are in fact failing and some of them have been used in price-manipulating frauds. But many are sound businesses with stocks that do not trade at high enough prices or in large enough volumes to require listing on major exchanges. In the tech-stock recession of spring 2001, some computer and internet companies were delisted by the NASDAQ and added to the OTC Bulletin Board because the price of their stocks fell to pennies on the dollar. Some may be relisted in the future.

AMEX, the American Stock Exchange, is now a subsidiary of the National Association of Security Dealers. It has specialists to process orders in 1000 or so stocks and bonds and also trades what are known as options and derivatives, various sales contracts conditioned on some future value of a stock or bond. Once known as "the curb exchange," it represents a broader spectrum of American business than the NYSE because it handles the offerings of companies that do not qualify for listing on "the big board."

Derivatives, currency, and commodities--that is, agricultural products and industrial raw materials--are handled by a number of specialized exchanges.

The Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) were both founded as grain markets. The CBOT now handles heavy trading in financial futures and options including those based on United States government and agency bonds. The Chicago Board of Trade has also created a separate exchange, CBOE (Chicago Board Options Exchange) which trades in a number of options but is best known as the primary marketplace for options based on market indices such as the Dow Jones.

See also: List of stock exchanges, List of stock market indices

List of Marketing TopicsList of Management Topics
List of Economics TopicsList of Accounting Topics
List of Finance TopicsList of Economists

Referenced By

ATTAC | Classical Economics | Costs of production | Economic | EconomicS | Economic policies | Economic policy | Economic science | Economics/Old talk | Economics articles (master list) | Economics basic topics | Exchange | List of building types | List of economics articles | List of economics topics | Mergers and acquisitions | Modern economics


License

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Stock exchange".

History

View article history.

 

Start a Discussion, Reply, or Add Information

Consider sharing your essay or research on this topic. Others will benefit from your knowledge.

Your Pen Name (optional):
Subject:
Your Message:
Enter security code to post message (not needed for preview):
 

 

 

Stock exchange
- September 16th, 2004
how can small scale industries be encouraged to seek quotations on stock exchange
read more »       messages 1 - last message on September 16th, 2004
 
Stock exchange
- September 16th, 2004
how can small / medium scale enterprises be encouraged to seek quotations on stock exchange
read more »       messages 1 - last message on September 16th, 2004
 
GSAE boomed on Thursday trading and could do ev…
- June 23rd, 2009
Green Star has 3 Straight Days of Momentum 6/19/2009 Green Star Alternative Energy, Inc. (OTC: GSAE) - MOMENTUM GAINER ALERT Our coverage started just this week for this Emerging Company and based on the past 3 trading days, GSAE is proving to the be the Alternative Energy Company to watch. As this momentum continues, now could be the best time to consider GSAE and watch closely as this company issues news that could continue to have a positive affect. Green Star Alternative Energy, Inc. (OTC: GSAE) came out of the Gate Blazing Thursday and immediately jumped to $2.75 in early
read more »       messages 1 - last message on June 23rd, 2009
 

 

 

 

 

Contact UsPrivacy Statement & Terms of Use

 
Authors retain copyright and ownership of all postings. Please contact the author for rights to use or purchase.
Knowledgerush © 2009