154x Filetype PPTX File size 0.12 MB Source: www.elsevier.com
2.1. Exchanges and Floor Markets • The Securities and Exchange Act of 1934 defined an exchange to be: any organization, association, or group of persons, whether incorporated or unincorporated, which constitutes, maintains, or provides a market place or facilities for bringing together purchasers and sellers of securities or for otherwise performing with respect to securities the functions commonly performed by a stock exchange as that term is generally understood, and includes the market place and the market facilities maintained by such exchange. • An exchange is a physical or virtual meeting place drawing together brokers, dealers and traders to facilitate the buying and selling of securities. • Exchanges include the floor-based markets as well as many virtual meeting sites and screen-based systems provided by Electronic Communications Networks (ECNs). Exchange Functions • Exchanges are intended to provide for orderly, liquid and continuous markets for the securities they trade. • A continuous market provides for transactions that can be executed at any time for a price that might be expected to differ little from the prior transaction price for the same security. • In addition, exchanges traditionally serve as self- regulatory organizations (SROs) for their members, regulating and policing their behavior with respect to a variety of rules and requirements. 2.2. The Way it Was • Precursors to modern stock exchanges might have existed in Egypt as early as the 11th century, where it is believed that Jewish and Islamic brokers traded a variety of credit-related instruments. • 13th century Bruges (Belgium) commodity traders assembled in the van der Beurse family home (and inn), ultimately becoming the “Brugse Beurse.” • The Amsterdam Stock Exchange opened in the early 17th century, trading shares of the Dutch East India Company. The exchange continues to operate as a unit of Euronext, and as the world's longest continuously operated exchange. • Several older exchanges began in coffee houses and taverns, where brokers and dealers would meet to trade securities. Early U.S. Exchanges • The first securities exchange to operate in the United States was in Philadelphia. • The New York Stock Exchange began operations outdoors after the 1792 signing of the “Buttonwood Agreement.” • Exchanges often operated outdoors so that brokers could call out their orders from their office windows to the street where transactions actually took place. • The American Stock Exchange, known as the New York Curb Exchange until 1953, did not move indoors until 1921. Traditional NYSE Structure • Until 2006, the NYSE was a hybrid corporation/partnership whose members faced unlimited liability. • Only members who owned or leased seats had trading privileges and there were four types of members: –House Broker: Executed orders on behalf of clients submitting orders through brokerage firms. This and other broker roles have been taken over by "Trading Floor Brokers." –Independent Broker: Also called a two-dollar broker, executed orders on behalf of commission brokers when activity was high. This type of distinct membership no longer exists. –Floor Trader: Executed orders on their own trading accounts. The NYSE has created the "Supplemental Liquidity Provider" role, which is intended to enhance market liquidity by allowing for proprietary trading. –Specialist: Responsible for maintaining a continuous, liquid, orderly market for the securities in which he specializes. The specialist has been replaced by the Designated Market Maker (DMM).
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