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New York Stock Exchange Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver.

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Presentation on theme: "New York Stock Exchange Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver."— Presentation transcript:

1 New York Stock Exchange Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver Economics 521 Elisa Claire Weaver

2 Stock Market  Owning stock means you own a slice of a public company.  When a company needs to raise money to expand, it sells stocks or bonds to the public through the financial markets.  Individuals become investors in this company by purchasing those securities.  Central to this activity is the NYSE marketplace, where billions of dollars worth of stock change hands each day.  Owning stock means you own a slice of a public company.  When a company needs to raise money to expand, it sells stocks or bonds to the public through the financial markets.  Individuals become investors in this company by purchasing those securities.  Central to this activity is the NYSE marketplace, where billions of dollars worth of stock change hands each day.

3 New York Stock Exchange  Largest stock exchange in the world by dollar volume  Second largest by number of companies  Global capitalization of $23 trillion as of September 30, 2006  Founded on March 8, 1817  Largest stock exchange in the world by dollar volume  Second largest by number of companies  Global capitalization of $23 trillion as of September 30, 2006  Founded on March 8, 1817

4 History  May 17, 1792 - Buttonwood Agreement  Signed by 24 stock brokers  Two provisions:  The brokers were to deal only with each other. Thereby eliminating the auctioneers, and  The commissions were to be.25%.  March 8, 1817 - drafted constitution, named itself the "New York Stock & Exchange Board".  In 1863, this name was shortened to its modern form, "New York Stock Exchange".  Anthony Stockholm was elected as the first president  May 17, 1792 - Buttonwood Agreement  Signed by 24 stock brokers  Two provisions:  The brokers were to deal only with each other. Thereby eliminating the auctioneers, and  The commissions were to be.25%.  March 8, 1817 - drafted constitution, named itself the "New York Stock & Exchange Board".  In 1863, this name was shortened to its modern form, "New York Stock Exchange".  Anthony Stockholm was elected as the first president

5 Membership  Until recently, members could only join by purchasing existing seats, which were limited to a total of 1,366.  In December of 2005, the NYSE went both electronic and public, by merging with the already publicly traded Archipelago electronic stock exchange.  The new merged company is called the NYSE Group, Inc., and the seats of the NYSE translated into shares of stock which are now traded under the ticker symbol NYX.  Until recently, members could only join by purchasing existing seats, which were limited to a total of 1,366.  In December of 2005, the NYSE went both electronic and public, by merging with the already publicly traded Archipelago electronic stock exchange.  The new merged company is called the NYSE Group, Inc., and the seats of the NYSE translated into shares of stock which are now traded under the ticker symbol NYX.

6 Continuous Auction Format  Prior to the 2005 merger, there was one specific location on the trading floor where each listed stock traded  This human interaction differentiates the NYSE from fully electronic markets  Recently adopted a hybrid market structure  Prior to the 2005 merger, there was one specific location on the trading floor where each listed stock traded  This human interaction differentiates the NYSE from fully electronic markets  Recently adopted a hybrid market structure

7 NYSE Composite Index  Created in the mid-1960s to reflect the value of all stocks traded, not just the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average  Base value was 50 points equal to the 1965 yearly close  2003 new base value of 5,000 equal to the 2002 yearly close  Lifetime high 9,188.17 - Dec 28, 2006  Lifetime low 347.77 - October 1974  Created in the mid-1960s to reflect the value of all stocks traded, not just the 30 stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average  Base value was 50 points equal to the 1965 yearly close  2003 new base value of 5,000 equal to the 2002 yearly close  Lifetime high 9,188.17 - Dec 28, 2006  Lifetime low 347.77 - October 1974

8 Chronology  1792 - The first traded company on the NYSE  1817 - Rules and a Constitution - The New York Stock and Exchange Board  1867 - The First Stock Ticker  1896 - DJIA published by The Wall Street Journal  1903 - NYSE moves into its new quarters at 18 Broad Street  1907 - Panic of 1907  1914 - World War I causes longest exchange shutdown  1915 - Market price in $$  1929 - Central Quote System  1929 - Black Thursday (10/24) and Black Tuesday (10/29)  1943 - Women Work on Trading Floor  1949 - Longest Bull Run begins  1954 - Dow surpasses 1929 peak  1966 - NYSE creates Common Stock Index  1966 - Floor data fully automated  1970 - Securities Investor Protection Corporation established  1971 - NYSE Not-for-Profit  1792 - The first traded company on the NYSE  1817 - Rules and a Constitution - The New York Stock and Exchange Board  1867 - The First Stock Ticker  1896 - DJIA published by The Wall Street Journal  1903 - NYSE moves into its new quarters at 18 Broad Street  1907 - Panic of 1907  1914 - World War I causes longest exchange shutdown  1915 - Market price in $$  1929 - Central Quote System  1929 - Black Thursday (10/24) and Black Tuesday (10/29)  1943 - Women Work on Trading Floor  1949 - Longest Bull Run begins  1954 - Dow surpasses 1929 peak  1966 - NYSE creates Common Stock Index  1966 - Floor data fully automated  1970 - Securities Investor Protection Corporation established  1971 - NYSE Not-for-Profit  1972 - DJIA Closes Over 1,000  1977 - Foreign Brokers/Dealers are admitted  1979 - New York Futures Exchange established  1985 - Ronald Reagan visits NYSE  1987 - Largest One-Day Percentage Drop of DJIA (Black Monday, 19 October)  1991 - Dow exceeds 3,000  1992 - NYSE celebrates its Bicentennial  1996 - Real-time Ticker introduced  1999 - DJIA tops 10,000  2000 - First Global Index Launches  2001 - Trading in Fractions (n/16) ends, replaced by decimals (decimalisation)  2001 - Terrorist Attacks on World Trade Center (September 11): NYSE closed for 4 session days  2003 - NYSE Composite Index relaunched  2006 - NYSE and ArcaEx merge - NYSE Group, Inc. For-profit, publicly owned company  2006 - NYSE Group buys Euronext, creating the first trans-Atlantic stock exchange group  1972 - DJIA Closes Over 1,000  1977 - Foreign Brokers/Dealers are admitted  1979 - New York Futures Exchange established  1985 - Ronald Reagan visits NYSE  1987 - Largest One-Day Percentage Drop of DJIA (Black Monday, 19 October)  1991 - Dow exceeds 3,000  1992 - NYSE celebrates its Bicentennial  1996 - Real-time Ticker introduced  1999 - DJIA tops 10,000  2000 - First Global Index Launches  2001 - Trading in Fractions (n/16) ends, replaced by decimals (decimalisation)  2001 - Terrorist Attacks on World Trade Center (September 11): NYSE closed for 4 session days  2003 - NYSE Composite Index relaunched  2006 - NYSE and ArcaEx merge - NYSE Group, Inc. For-profit, publicly owned company  2006 - NYSE Group buys Euronext, creating the first trans-Atlantic stock exchange group


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