Stock market

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in the blooming era of Internet.

 

A stock market, equity market or share market is the aggregation of buyers and sellers (a loose network of economic transactions, not a physical facility or discrete entity) of stocks (also called shares), which represent ownership claims on businesses; these may include securities listed on a public stock exchange as well as those only traded privately. Examples of the latter include shares of private companies which are sold to investors through equity crowdfunding platforms. Stock exchanges list shares of common equity as well as other security types, e.g. corporate bonds and convertible bonds.

Size of the market

Stocks can be categorised in various ways. One way is by the country where the company is domiciled. For example, Nestlé and Novartis are domiciled in Switzerland, so they may be considered as part of the Swiss stock market, although their stock may also be traded on exchanges in other countries, for example, as American depository receipts (ADRs) on U.S. stock markets.

As of mid 2017, the size of the world stock market (total market capitalisation) was about US$76.3 trillion. By country, the largest market was the United States (about 34%), followed by Japan (about 6%) and the United Kingdom (about 6%). These numbers increased in 2013.

As of 2015, there are a total of 60 stock exchanges in the world with a total market capitalization of $69 trillion. Of these, there are 16 exchanges with a market capitalization of $1 trillion or more, and they account for 87% of global market capitalization. Apart from the Australian Securities Exchange, these 16 exchanges are based in one of three continents: North America, Europe and Asia.

Stock exchange

A stock exchange is a place where, or an organization through which, individuals and organizations can trade stocks. Many large companies have their stock listed on a stock exchange. This makes the stock more liquid and thus more attractive to many investors. It may also act as a guarantor of settlement. Other stocks may be traded “over the counter” (OTC), that is, through a dealer. Some large companies will have their stock listed on more than one exchange in different countries, so as to attract international investors.

Stock exchanges may also cover other types of securities, such as fixed interest securities (bonds) or (less frequently) derivatives, which are more likely to be traded OTC.

Trade

Trade in stock markets means the transfer for money of a stock or security from a seller to a buyer. This requires these two parties to agree on a price. Equities (stocks or shares) confer an ownership interest in a particular company.

Participants in the stock market range from small individual stock investors to larger trader investors, who can be based anywhere in the world, and may include banks, insurance companies, pension funds and hedge funds. Their buy or sell orders may be executed on their behalf by a stock exchange trader.

Some exchanges are physical locations where transactions are carried out on a trading floor, by a method known as open outcry. This method is used in some stock exchanges and commodity exchanges, and involves traders shouting bid and offer prices. The other type of stock exchange has a network of computers where trades are made electronically. An example of such an exchange is the NASDAQ.

A potential buyer bids a specific price for a stock, and a potential seller asks a specific price for the same stock. Buying or selling at the market means you will accept any ask price or bid price for the stock. When the bid and ask prices match, a sale takes place, on a first-come, first-served basis if there are multiple bidders or askers at a given price.

The purpose of a stock exchange is to facilitate the exchange of securities between buyers and sellers, thus providing a marketplace. The exchanges provide real-time trading information on the listed securities, facilitating price discovery.

The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) is a physical exchange, with a hybrid market for placing orders electronically from any location as well as on the trading floor. Orders executed on the trading floor enter by way of exchange members and flow down to a floor broker, who submits the order electronically to the floor trading post for the Designated Market Maker (“DMM”) for that stock to trade the order. The DMM’s job is to maintain a two-sided market, making orders to buy and sell the security when there are no other buyers or sellers. If a spread exists, no trade immediately takes place – in this case the DMM may use their own resources (money or stock) to close the difference. Once a trade has been made, the details are reported on the “tape” and sent back to the brokerage firm, which then notifies the investor who placed the order. Computers play an important role, especially for program trading.

The NASDAQ is a virtual exchange, where all of the trading is done over a computer network. The process is similar to the New York Stock Exchange. One or more NASDAQ market makers will always provide a bid and ask price at which they will always purchase or sell ‘their’ stock.

The Paris Bourse, now part of Euronext, is an order-driven, electronic stock exchange. It was automated in the late 1980s. Prior to the 1980s, it consisted of an open outcry exchange. Stockbrokers met on the trading floor of the Palais Brongniart. In 1986, the CATS trading system was introduced, and the order matching process was fully automated.

People trading stock will prefer to trade on the most popular exchange since this gives the largest number of potential counterparties (buyers for a seller, sellers for a buyer) and probably the best price. However, there have always been alternatives such as brokers trying to bring parties together to trade outside the exchange. Some third markets that were popular are Instinet, and later Island and Archipelago (the later two have since been acquired by Nasdaq and NYSE, respectively). One advantage is that this avoids the commissions of the exchange. However, it also has problems such as adverse selection.[6] Financial regulators are probing dark pools.

Market participant

Market participants include individual retail investors, institutional investors such as mutual funds, banks, insurance companies and hedge funds, and also publicly traded corporations trading in their own shares. Some studies have suggested that institutional investors and corporations trading in their own shares generally receive higher risk-adjusted returns than retail investors.[9]

A few decades ago, most buyers and sellers were individual investors, such as wealthy businessmen, usually with long family histories to particular corporations. Over time, markets have become more “institutionalized”; buyers and sellers are largely institutions (e.g., pension funds, insurance companies, mutual funds, index funds, exchange-traded funds, hedge funds, investor groups, banks and various other financial institutions).

The rise of the institutional investor has brought with it some improvements in market operations. There has been a gradual tendency for “fixed” (and exorbitant) fees being reduced for all investors, partly from falling administration costs but also assisted by large institutions challenging brokers’ oligopolistic approach to setting standardised fees.[citation needed] A current trend in stock market investments includes the decrease in fees due to computerized asset management termed Robo Advisers within the industry. Automation has decreased portfolio management costs by lowering the cost associated with investing as a whole.

Trends in market participation

Stock market participation refers to the number of agents who buy and sell equity backed securities either directly or indirectly in a financial exchange. Participants are generally subdivided into three distinct sectors; households, institutions, and foreign traders. Direct participation occurs when any of the above entities buys or sells securities on its own behalf on an exchange. Indirect participation occurs when an institutional investor exchanges a stock on behalf of an individual or household. Indirect investment occurs in the form of pooled investment accounts, retirement accounts, and other managed financial accounts.

Indirect vs. direct investment

The total value of equity-backed securities in the United States rose over 600% in the 25 years between 1989 and 2012 as market capitalization expanded from $2,790 billion to $18,668 billion.[10] Direct ownership of stock by individuals rose slightly from 17.8% in 1992 to 17.9% in 2007, with the median value of these holdings rising from $14,778 to $17,000.[11][12] Indirect participation in the form of retirement accounts rose from 39.3% in 1992 to 52.6% in 2007, with the median value of these accounts more than doubling from $22,000 to $45,000 in that time.[11][12] Rydqvist, Spizman, and Strebulaev attribute the differential growth in direct and indirect holdings to differences in the way each are taxed in the United States. Investments in pension funds and 401ks, the two most common vehicles of indirect participation, are taxed only when funds are withdrawn from the accounts. Conversely, the money used to directly purchase stock is subject to taxation as are any dividends or capital gains they generate for the holder. In this way the current tax code incentivizes individuals to invest indirectly.

Participation by income and wealth strata

Rates of participation and the value of holdings differs significantly across strata of income. In the bottom quintile of income, 5.5% of households directly own stock and 10.7% hold stocks indirectly in the form of retirement accounts. The top decile of income has a direct participation rate of 47.5% and an indirect participation rate in the form of retirement accounts of 89.6%. The median value of directly owned stock in the bottom quintile of income is $4,000 and is $78,600 in the top decile of income as of 2007. The median value of indirectly held stock in the form of retirement accounts for the same two groups in the same year is $6,300 and $214,800 respectively. Since the Great Recession of 2008 households in the bottom half of the income distribution have lessened their participation rate both directly and indirectly from 53.2% in 2007 to 48.8% in 2013, while over the same time period households in the top decile of the income distribution slightly increased participation 91.7% to 92.1%. The mean value of direct and indirect holdings at the bottom half of the income distribution moved slightly downward from $53,800 in 2007 to $53,600 in 2013. In the top decile, mean value of all holdings fell from $982,000 to $969,300 in the same time. The mean value of all stock holdings across the entire income distribution is valued at $269,900 as of 2013.

Participation by head of household race and gender

The racial composition of stock market ownership shows households headed by whites are nearly four and six times as likely to directly own stocks than households headed by blacks and Hispanics respectively. As of 2011 the national rate of direct participation was 19.6%, for white households the participation rate was 24.5%, for black households it was 6.4% and for Hispanic households it was 4.3% Indirect participation in the form of 401k ownership shows a similar pattern with a national participation rate of 42.1%, a rate of 46.4% for white households, 31.7% for black households, and 25.8% for Hispanic households. Households headed by married couples participated at rates above the national averages with 25.6% participating directly and 53.4% participating indirectly through a retirement account. 14.7% of households headed by men participated in the market directly and 33.4% owned stock through a retirement account. 12.6% of female headed households directly owned stock and 28.7% owned stock indirectly.

Determinants and possible explanations of stock market participation

In a 2002 paper Anntte Vissing-Jorgensen from the University of Chicago attempts to explain disproportionate rates of participation along wealth and income groups as a function of fixed costs associated with investing. Her research concludes that a fixed cost of $200 per year is sufficient to explain why nearly half of all U.S. households do not participate in the market.[16] Participation rates have been shown to strongly correlate with education levels, promoting the hypothesis that information and transaction costs of market participation are better absorbed by more educated households. Behavioral economists Harrison Hong, Jeffrey Kubik and Jeremy Stein suggest that sociability and participation rates of communities have a statistically significant impact on an individual’s decision to participate in the market. Their research indicates that social individuals living in states with higher than average participation rates are 5% more likely to participate than individuals that do not share those characteristics. This phenomenon also explained in cost terms. Knowledge of market functioning diffuses through communities and consequently lowers transaction costs associated with investing.

Importance

As the Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises noted, “A stock market is crucial to the existence of capitalism and private property. For it means that there is a functioning market in the exchange of private titles to the means of production. There can be no genuine private ownership of capital without a stock market: there can be no true socialism if such a market is allowed to exist.”[38]

Function and purpose

The stock market is one of the most important ways for companies to raise money, along with debt markets which are generally more imposing but do not trade publicly.[39] This allows businesses to be publicly traded, and raise additional financial capital for expansion by selling shares of ownership of the company in a public market. The liquidity that an exchange affords the investors enables their holders to quickly and easily sell securities. This is an attractive feature of investing in stocks, compared to other less liquid investments such as property and other immoveable assets. Some companies actively increase liquidity by trading in their own shares.[40][41]

History has shown that the price of stocks and other assets is an important part of the dynamics of economic activity, and can influence or be an indicator of social mood. An economy where the stock market is on the rise is considered to be an up-and-coming economy. The stock market is often considered the primary indicator of a country’s economic strength and development.[42]

Rising share prices, for instance, tend to be associated with increased business investment and vice versa. Share prices also affect the wealth of households and their consumption. Therefore, central banks tend to keep an eye on the control and behavior of the stock market and, in general, on the smooth operation of financial system functions. Financial stability is the raison d’être of central banks.[43]

Exchanges also act as the clearinghouse for each transaction, meaning that they collect and deliver the shares, and guarantee payment to the seller of a security. This eliminates the risk to an individual buyer or seller that the counterparty could default on the transaction.[44]

The smooth functioning of all these activities facilitates economic growth in that lower costs and enterprise risks promote the production of goods and services as well as possibly employment. In this way the financial system is assumed to contribute to increased prosperity, although some controversy exists as to whether the optimal financial system is bank-based or market-based.[45][citation needed]

Recent events such as the Global Financial Crisis have prompted a heightened degree of scrutiny of the impact of the structure of stock markets[46][47] (called market microstructure), in particular to the stability of the financial system and the transmission of systemic risk.[48]

Relation to the modern financial system

The financial system in most western countries has undergone a remarkable transformation. One feature of this development is disintermediation. A portion of the funds involved in saving and financing, flows directly to the financial markets instead of being routed via the traditional bank lending and deposit operations. The general public interest in investing in the stock market, either directly or through mutual funds, has been an important component of this process.

Statistics show that in recent decades, shares have made up an increasingly large proportion of households’ financial assets in many countries. In the 1970s, in Sweden, deposit accounts and other very liquid assets with little risk made up almost 60 percent of households’ financial wealth, compared to less than 20 percent in the 2000s. The major part of this adjustment is that financial portfolios have gone directly to shares but a good deal now takes the form of various kinds of institutional investment for groups of individuals, e.g., pension funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, insurance investment of premiums, etc.

The trend towards forms of saving with a higher risk has been accentuated by new rules for most funds and insurance, permitting a higher proportion of shares to bonds. Similar tendencies are to be found in other developed countries. In all developed economic systems, such as the European Union, the United States, Japan and other developed nations, the trend has been the same: saving has moved away from traditional (government insured) “bank deposits to more risky securities of one sort or another”.

A second transformation is the move to electronic trading to replace human trading of listed securities.[47]

United States S&P stock market returns

(assumes 2% annual dividend)

Years to December 31, 2012 Average Annual Return
%
Average Compounded
Annual Return
%
1 15.5 15.5
3 10.9 11.6
5 4.3 10.1
10 8.8 7.3
15 6.5 5.9
20 10.0 6.4
30 11.6 7.3
40 10.1 8.0
50 10.0 8.1
60 10.5 8.2

Compared to Other Asset Classes Over the long term, investing in a well diversified portfolio of stocks such as an S&P 500 Index outperforms other investment vehicles such as Treasury Bills and Bonds, with the S&P 500 having a geometric annual average of 9.55% from 1928 to 2013.[49]

Behavior of the stock market

Investors may temporarily move financial prices away from market equilibrium. Over-reactions may occur—so that excessive optimism (euphoria) may drive prices unduly high or excessive pessimism may drive prices unduly low. Economists continue to debate whether financial markets are generally efficient.

According to one interpretation of the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH), only changes in fundamental factors, such as the outlook for margins, profits or dividends, ought to affect share prices beyond the short term, where random ‘noise’ in the system may prevail. The ‘hard’ efficient-market hypothesis does not explain the cause of events such as the crash in 1987, when the Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 22.6 percent—the largest-ever one-day fall in the United States.[50]

This event demonstrated that share prices can fall dramatically even though no generally agreed upon definite cause has been found: a thorough search failed to detect any ‘reasonable’ development that might have accounted for the crash. (Note that such events are predicted to occur strictly by chance, although very rarely.) It seems also to be the case more generally that many price movements (beyond that which are predicted to occur ‘randomly’) are not occasioned by new information; a study of the fifty largest one-day share price movements in the United States in the post-war period seems to confirm this.[50]

A ‘soft’ EMH has emerged which does not require that prices remain at or near equilibrium, but only that market participants not be able to systematically profit from any momentary market ‘inefficiencies‘. Moreover, while EMH predicts that all price movement (in the absence of change in fundamental information) is random (i.e., non-trending), many studies have shown a marked tendency for the stock market to trend over time periods of weeks or longer. Various explanations for such large and apparently non-random price movements have been promulgated. For instance, some research has shown that changes in estimated risk, and the use of certain strategies, such as stop-loss limits and value at risk limits, theoretically could cause financial markets to overreact. But the best explanation seems to be that the distribution of stock market prices is non-Gaussian[51] (in which case EMH, in any of its current forms, would not be strictly applicable).[52][53]

Other research has shown that psychological factors may result in exaggerated (statistically anomalous) stock price movements (contrary to EMH which assumes such behaviors ‘cancel out’). Psychological research has demonstrated that people are predisposed to ‘seeing’ patterns, and often will perceive a pattern in what is, in fact, just noise, e.g. seeing familiar shapes in clouds or ink blots. In the present context this means that a succession of good news items about a company may lead investors to overreact positively, driving the price up. A period of good returns also boosts the investors’ self-confidence, reducing their (psychological) risk threshold.[54]

Another phenomenon—also from psychology—that works against an objective assessment is group thinking. As social animals, it is not easy to stick to an opinion that differs markedly from that of a majority of the group. An example with which one may be familiar is the reluctance to enter a restaurant that is empty; people generally prefer to have their opinion validated by those of others in the group.

In one paper the authors draw an analogy with gambling.[55] In normal times the market behaves like a game of roulette; the probabilities are known and largely independent of the investment decisions of the different players. In times of market stress, however, the game becomes more like poker (herding behavior takes over). The players now must give heavy weight to the psychology of other investors and how they are likely to react psychologically.

In the period running up to the 1987 crash, less than 1 percent of the analyst’s recommendations had been to sell (and even during the 2000–2002 bear market, the average did not rise above 5%). In the run-up to 2000, the media amplified the general euphoria, with reports of rapidly rising share prices and the notion that large sums of money could be quickly earned in the so-called new economy stock market.[citation needed]

Stock markets play an essential role in growing industries that ultimately affect the economy through transferring available funds from units that have excess funds (savings) to those who are suffering from funds deficit (borrowings) (Padhi and Naik, 2012). In other words, capital markets facilitate funds movement between the above-mentioned units. This process leads to the enhancement of available financial resources which in turn affects the economic growth positively. Moreover, both economic and financial theories argue that stock prices are affected by macroeconomic trends.[citation needed]

Many different academic researchers have stated companies with low P/E ratios and smaller sized companies have a tendency to outperform the market. Research carried out states mid-sized companies outperform large cap companies and smaller companies have higher returns historically.

Irrational behavior

Sometimes, the market seems to react irrationally to economic or financial news, even if that news is likely to have no real effect on the fundamental value of securities itself. [56] However, this market behaviour may be more apparent than real, since often such news was anticipated, and a counterreaction may occur if the news is better (or worse) than expected. Therefore, the stock market may be swayed in either direction by press releases, rumors, euphoria and mass panic.

Over the short-term, stocks and other securities can be battered or buoyed by any number of fast market-changing events, making the stock market behavior difficult to predict. Emotions can drive prices up and down, people are generally not as rational as they think, and the reasons for buying and selling are generally accepted.

Behaviorists argue that investors often behave irrationally when making investment decisions thereby incorrectly pricing securities, which causes market inefficiencies, which, in turn, are opportunities to make money. However, the whole notion of EMH is that these non-rational reactions to information cancel out, leaving the prices of stocks rationally determined.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average biggest gain in one day was 936.42 points or 11%.[58]

Crashes

A stock market crash is often defined as a sharp dip in share prices of stocks listed on the stock exchanges. In parallel with various economic factors, a reason for stock market crashes is also due to panic and investing public’s loss of confidence. Often, stock market crashes end speculative economic bubbles.

There have been famous stock market crashes that have ended in the loss of billions of dollars and wealth destruction on a massive scale. An increasing number of people are involved in the stock market, especially since the social security and retirement plans are being increasingly privatized and linked to stocks and bonds and other elements of the market. There have been a number of famous stock market crashes like the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the stock market crash of 1973–4, the Black Monday of 1987, the Dot-com bubble of 2000, and the Stock Market Crash of 2008.

One of the most famous stock market crashes started October 24, 1929, on Black Thursday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 50% during this stock market crash. It was the beginning of the Great Depression. Another famous crash took place on October 19, 1987 – Black Monday. The crash began in Hong Kong and quickly spread around the world.

By the end of October, stock markets in Hong Kong had fallen 45.5%, Australia 41.8%, Spain 31%, the United Kingdom 26.4%, the United States 22.68%, and Canada 22.5%. Black Monday itself was the largest one-day percentage decline in stock market history – the Dow Jones fell by 22.6% in a day. The names “Black Monday” and “Black Tuesday” are also used for October 28–29, 1929, which followed Terrible Thursday—the starting day of the stock market crash in 1929.

The crash in 1987 raised some puzzles – main news and events did not predict the catastrophe and visible reasons for the collapse were not identified. This event raised questions about many important assumptions of modern economics, namely, the theory of rational human conduct, the theory of market equilibrium and the efficient-market hypothesis. For some time after the crash, trading in stock exchanges worldwide was halted, since the exchange computers did not perform well owing to enormous quantity of trades being received at one time. This halt in trading allowed the Federal Reserve System and central banks of other countries to take measures to control the spreading of worldwide financial crisis. In the United States the SEC introduced several new measures of control into the stock market in an attempt to prevent a re-occurrence of the events of Black Monday.

Since the early 1990s, many of the largest exchanges have adopted electronic ‘matching engines’ to bring together buyers and sellers, replacing the open outcry system. Electronic trading now accounts for the majority of trading in many developed countries. Computer systems were upgraded in the stock exchanges to handle larger trading volumes in a more accurate and controlled manner. The SEC modified the margin requirements in an attempt to lower the volatility of common stocks, stock options and the futures market. The New York Stock Exchange and the Chicago Mercantile Exchange introduced the concept of a circuit breaker. The circuit breaker halts trading if the Dow declines a prescribed number of points for a prescribed amount of time. In February 2012, the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada (IIROC) introduced single-stock circuit breakers.[60]

  • New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) circuit breakers[61]
 % drop time of drop close trading for
10 before 2 pm one hour halt
10 2 pm – 2:30 pm half-hour halt
10 after 2:30 pm market stays open
20 before 1 pm halt for two hours
20 1 pm – 2 pm halt for one hour
20 after 2 pm close for the day
30 any time during day close for the day

Stock market prediction

Tobias Preis and his colleagues Helen Susannah Moat and H. Eugene Stanley introduced a method to identify online precursors for stock market moves, using trading strategies based on search volume data provided by Google Trends.[62] Their analysis of Google search volume for 98 terms of varying financial relevance suggests that increases in search volume for financially relevant search terms tend to precede large losses in financial markets.[63][64]

Stock market index

The movements of the prices in a market or section of a market are captured in price indices called stock market indices, of which there are many, e.g., the S&P, the FTSE and the Euronext indices. Such indices are usually market capitalization weighted, with the weights reflecting the contribution of the stock to the index. The constituents of the index are reviewed frequently to include/exclude stocks in order to reflect the changing business environment.

Derivative instruments

Financial innovation has brought many new financial instruments whose pay-offs or values depend on the prices of stocks. Some examples are exchange-traded funds (ETFs), stock index and stock options, equity swaps, single-stock futures, and stock index futures. These last two may be traded on futures exchanges (which are distinct from stock exchanges—their history traces back to commodity futures exchanges), or traded over-the-counter. As all of these products are only derived from stocks, they are sometimes considered to be traded in a (hypothetical) derivatives market, rather than the (hypothetical) stock market.

Leveraged strategies

Stock that a trader does not actually own may be traded using short selling; margin buying may be used to purchase stock with borrowed funds; or, derivatives may be used to control large blocks of stocks for a much smaller amount of money than would be required by outright purchase or sales.

Short selling

In short selling, the trader borrows stock (usually from his brokerage which holds its clients’ shares or its own shares on account to lend to short sellers) then sells it on the market, betting that the price will fall. The trader eventually buys back the stock, making money if the price fell in the meantime and losing money if it rose. Exiting a short position by buying back the stock is called “covering.” This strategy may also be used by unscrupulous traders in illiquid or thinly traded markets to artificially lower the price of a stock. Hence most markets either prevent short selling or place restrictions on when and how a short sale can occur. The practice of naked shorting is illegal in most (but not all) stock markets.

Margin buying

In margin buying, the trader borrows money (at interest) to buy a stock and hopes for it to rise. Most industrialized countries have regulations that require that if the borrowing is based on collateral from other stocks the trader owns outright, it can be a maximum of a certain percentage of those other stocks’ value. In the United States, the margin requirements have been 50% for many years (that is, if you want to make a $1000 investment, you need to put up $500, and there is often a maintenance margin below the $500).

A margin call is made if the total value of the investor’s account cannot support the loss of the trade. (Upon a decline in the value of the margined securities additional funds may be required to maintain the account’s equity, and with or without notice the margined security or any others within the account may be sold by the brokerage to protect its loan position. The investor is responsible for any shortfall following such forced sales.)

Regulation of margin requirements (by the Federal Reserve) was implemented after the Crash of 1929. Before that, speculators typically only needed to put up as little as 10 percent (or even less) of the total investment represented by the stocks purchased. Other rules may include the prohibition of free-riding: putting in an order to buy stocks without paying initially (there is normally a three-day grace period for delivery of the stock), but then selling them (before the three-days are up) and using part of the proceeds to make the original payment (assuming that the value of the stocks has not declined in the interim).

New issuance

Global issuance of equity and equity-related instruments totaled $505 billion in 2004, a 29.8% increase over the $389 billion raised in 2003. Initial public offerings (IPOs) by US issuers increased 221% with 233 offerings that raised $45 billion, and IPOs in Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA) increased by 333%, from $9 billion to $39 billion.

ASX Share Market Game

ASX Share Market Game is a platform for Australian school students and beginners to learn about trading stocks. The game is a free service hosted on ASX (Australian Securities Exchange) website.[65] Each year more than 70,000 students enroll in the game. For the vast majority, this is an introduction to stock market investing. Students once enrolled, are given $50,000 of virtual money and can buy and sell up to 20 times a day. The game runs for 10 weeks. Many similar programs are found in secondary educational institutions across the world.

Investment strategies

There are many different approaches to investing. Many strategies can be classified as either fundamental analysis or technical analysis. Fundamental analysis refers to analyzing companies by their financial statements found in SEC filings, business trends, general economic conditions, etc. Technical analysis studies price actions in markets through the use of charts and quantitative techniques to attempt to forecast price trends regardless of the company’s financial prospects. One example of a technical strategy is the Trend following method, used by John W. Henry and Ed Seykota, which uses price patterns and is also rooted in risk control and diversification.

Additionally, many choose to invest via the index method. In this method, one holds a weighted or unweighted portfolio consisting of the entire stock market or some segment of the stock market (such as the S&P 500 or Wilshire 5000). The principal aim of this strategy is to maximize diversification, minimize taxes from too frequent trading, and ride the general trend of the stock market (which, in the U.S., has averaged nearly 10% per year, compounded annually, since World War II).

Taxation

According to much national or state legislation, a large array of fiscal obligations are taxed for capital gains. Taxes are charged by the state over the transactions, dividends and capital gains on the stock market, in particular in the stock exchanges. These fiscal obligations vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Some countries[which?] avoid taxing profits on stocks as the profits are already taxed when companies file returns, but double taxation is common at some level in many countries.

See also

Source: Stock market, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stock_market&oldid=818059276 (last visited Jan. 1, 2018).

Aktienmarkt

Der Aktienmarkt (englisch stock market) ist ein Marktsegment des Kapitalmarkts, das den börslichen und außerbörslichen Handel mit Aktien umfasst. Komplementärbegriff ist der Rentenmarkt.

Allgemeines

Die Finanzmärkte werden in Geld- und Kapitalmarkt eingeteilt. Der Kapitalmarkt wiederum setzt sich aus den Marktsegmenten Aktien- und Rentenmarkt zusammen. Wie bei allen Märkten gibt es auch auf dem Aktienmarkt Handelsobjekte und Marktteilnehmer, die Marktdaten zur Herstellung der Markttransparenz im Rahmen der Marktanalyse auswerten und die künftige Marktentwicklung beobachten. Sie zeigen ein bestimmtes Marktverhalten, das durch Angebot und Nachfrage zum Ausdruck kommt. Trends auf den Aktienmärkten werden mit Hilfe der Trendanalyse ausgewertet. Kernstück der Aktienmärkte sind die Aktienbörsen.

Geschichte

Der Aktienmarkt ist so alt wie die Aktie. Die erste Aktie überhaupt repräsentierte einen Anteil von 12,5 % an der im Juni 1288 erstmals urkundlich erwähnten schwedischen Kupfermine „Stora Kopparbergs Bergslags Aktiebolag“ in Falun.[2] In dem von der East India Company im September 1599 geschlossenen Vertrag verpflichteten sich ihre Gründer zur Aufbringung eines Kapitalfonds von 30133 £, der in 101 Aktien (englisch company shares) zerlegt war. Später folgte die Vereinigte Ostindische Kompanie (VOC), deren Aktien erstmals am 3. März 1603 zwischen Jan Allertsz und Maria van Egmont gehandelt wurden. Das aus sechs Kammern (niederländisch kamers) bestehende Unternehmen war weltweit das erste, das Aktien ausgab. Allerdings blieben die Aktionäre (niederländisch participanten) der VOC zehn Jahre an ihre Anlage gebunden; nach der verzinsten Rückzahlung 1612 wurde den Aktionären die Möglichkeit geboten, für weitere zehn Jahre zu zeichnen. Die erste Aktienbörse entstand mit der Amsterdam Stock Exchange (niederländisch Amsterdam beurs) im Jahre 1612. Sie gilt als erste Aktienbörse, die im 17. Jahrhundert einen dauerhaften Aktienhandel ermöglichte. Die Aktienbörsen fungierten von Beginn an nicht als Präsenzbörsen, denn Anbieter und Nachfrager ließen sich durch Börsenhändler vertreten, die standardisierten Handelsobjekte (Aktien) lagerten woanders, die Börsenkurse handelten nicht die Anbieter und Nachfrager untereinander aus, sondern überließen dies den Börsenmaklern.

Die ersten deutschen Aktien gelangten 1785 an der Börse Berlin auf den Kurszettel. Sie handelte seit ihrer Gründung am 5. Juni 1739 zunächst ausschließlich mit Wechseln, bis die 1769 gegründete „Emdener Heringsfang-Company“ – die seit 1785 in Berlin ein „Comptoir“ (Niederlassung) unterhielt – an der Berliner Börse ihre Aktien handeln ließ. Weitere deutsche Aktien erschienen nach 1810 auf dem Berliner Kurszettel, und zwar Aktien der „Zuckersiederey“ (gegründet 1749), „Seehandlungs-Societät“ (Oktober 1772), „Tabacks-Regie“ (November 1808) und „Assekuranz-Societät“. Bis 1850 kamen auch Eisenbahnaktien hinzu. Preußische Staatsanleihen konnte die Berliner Börse durch Dekret vom 27. Oktober 1810 einführen. Die Einführung von Aktien an der Wiener Börse begann 1818 mit der Aktie der Österreichischen Nationalbank. Die Zahl der Aktien dort stieg von acht im Jahre 1848 auf 39 Ende 1867.

Im Jahr 1865, als der Aktienmarkt noch als Nebenschauplatz des Kapitalismus galt, bezeichnete Karl Marx die Aktiengesellschaft als „Resultat der höchsten Entwicklung der kapitalistischen Produktion“, auch wenn die rechtsformbedingte Haftungsbeschränkung die Manager zu exzessiven Risiken verleiten könnte.[10] Die Aktienbörsen in Deutschland erlebten im Rahmen der Gründerzeit mit dem industriellen Aufschwung eine rasante Marktentwicklung. Den Aktienhandel führten nun auch regionale Börsen wie die Börse München (gegründet im Dezember 1830) ein, im März 1844 berichtete die Kölnische Zeitung über den ersten Aktienkurs von 131 ½ der Köln-Bonner Eisenbahnen an der Kölner Börse, es folgten die Börse Stuttgart (Februar 1861), Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (Aktienhandel seit 1871) oder die Börse Düsseldorf (Januar 1875). Ein im Januar 1870 eingeführter monatlicher Aktienindex erreichte bereits im November 1872 seinen Höchststand, allerdings lag er bei nur 186,2 Punkten.[11] In der Gründerzeit zwischen 1871 und 1873 entstanden in Deutschland 928 Aktiengesellschaften mit einem Gesamtkapital von 2,78 Milliarden Mark, im selben Zeitraum gründeten sich auch 107 Aktienbanken mit einem Gesamtkapital von 740 Milliarden Mark,[12] Die Berliner Börse beherrschte nach dem Ende des Deutsch-Französischen Kriegs im Mai 1871 den deutschen Aktienmarkt.[13] Der Gründerkrach führte am 9. Mai 1873 zu einem ersten schwarzen Freitag und ließ den Kurswert der Aktien auf die Hälfte sinken; von den 107 Aktienbanken blieben Ende 1873 lediglich noch 34 übrig. Als Folge änderte die Regierung im Juli 1884 das Aktiengesetz und wollte durch diese Novelle die Kleinsparer vom Aktienmarkt fernhalten.

Der börsliche Wertpapierhandel ruhte in Deutschland im Rahmen der deutschen Bankenkrise mit der Schließung der Börsen am 21. September 1931. Die Hamburger Börse nahm nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg am 9. Juli 1945 einen „kontrollierten Freiverkehr“ wieder auf, am 11. März 1952 begann hier auch der amtliche Handel. In Ländern mit mehreren Aktienmärkten konzentrierte sich der Handel stark auf eine Börse, die dadurch zur Hauptbörse avancierte. Während auf die Pariser Börse 95 % der französischen Börsenumsätze entfallen, erreicht die New York Stock Exchange 80 % des Umsatzes aller US-Börsen. Auch in Deutschland verloren die regionalen Börsen an Bedeutung; die Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse entwickelte sich nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg zum führenden Aktienmarkt Deutschlands, auf dem auch internationale Aktien gehandelt werden.[14] Etwa zwei Drittel aller deutschen Börsenumsätze entfallen auf Frankfurt, gefolgt von Düsseldorf. Von den 10.700 Unternehmen, deren Aktien im September 2014 an der Frankfurter Börse gehandelt wurden, nennen nur knapp 1.000 Frankfurt als ihren Heimatmarkt, die übrigen sind ausländische Aktien.

Marktteilnehmer und Marktdaten

Als Marktteilnehmer gibt es am Aktienmarkt Aktionäre, Anleger (institutionelle Anleger oder Privatanleger), Emittenten, Kreditinstitute sowie Börsenhändler und Börsenmakler. Das Handelsmotiv dieser Marktteilnehmer kann Geldanlage, Dienstleistung (Kreditinstitute mit Wertpapierorders ihrer Kunden), Arbitrage oder Spekulation sein. Markttransparenz wird vor allem durch die Börsenkurse und die Veröffentlichungen der Unternehmensdaten durch Emittenten geschaffen. Die Marktmechanismen bewirken eine Kursbildung durch Angebot und Nachfrage, das durch die Marktteilnehmer zustande kommt. Typische Marktdaten sind neben dem Börsenkurs die Dividendenrendite und der Aktienindex. Während die Dividendenrendite als Bezugswert eine Art „Marktzins“ darstellt, reflektiert der Aktienindex die Kursentwicklung und das Kursniveau auf den Aktienmärkten.

Arten

Allgemein gibt es seit November 2007 in allen EU-Mitgliedsstaaten die Börsensegmente „regulierter Markt“ (englisch regulated market) und „börsenregulierter Markt“ (englisch regulated unofficial market). Während der „regulierte Markt“ von der Europäischen Union überwacht wird, erfolgt die Regulierung des „börsenregulierten Markts“ durch die jeweilige Börse selbst. Die bisherigen deutschen Börsensegmente „amtlicher Markt“ und „geregelter Markt“ wurden im November 2007 in den „regulierten Markt“ überführt. Er stellt an der Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse mit den Börsensegmenten General Standard und Prime Standard aufbauende Handelssegmente mit höheren Transparenzstandards dar. Das Segment „börsenregulierter Markt“ ist an der Frankfurter Börse der Freiverkehr (englisch open market), seit Oktober 2005 Open Market genannt. Im Open market existieren derzeit die Unterbereiche Quotation Board (ehemals Second Quotation), Basic Board und Scale. Der Bereich First Quotation wurde im Juni 2012 nach einigen Skandalen (Marktmanipulation, Kapitalanlagebetrug) wieder abgeschafft.[15] Scale ist mit relativ geringen Anforderungen und Folgepflichten besonders für kleinere Unternehmen geeignet, die neu an die Börse möchten.

Im Hinblick auf den Umlauf unterscheidet man zwischen Primär- und Sekundärmarkt. Während auf dem Primärmarkt die Aktiengesellschaften erstmals ihre Neuemissionen vorstellen und Emissionen von Kapitalerhöhungen anbieten, werden auf dem Sekundärmarkt die bereits in Umlauf befindlichen Aktien gehandelt.

Volkswirtschaftliche Bedeutung

Der französische Ökonom Léon Walras beschrieb 1898 im Walras-Gesetz die Kursbildung am Beispiel des Aktienmarkts und setzte als Hypothesen unter anderem eine hinreichend große Zahl von Käufern und Verkäufern, einen den Anfangskurs ausrufenden Auktionator (Börsenmakler), verbindliche Mengenäußerungen der Käufer und Verkäufer und die Entstehung des Marktgleichgewichts voraus.[16] Dagegen entstehen Aktienkurse nach der im Februar 1936 veröffentlichten Allgemeinen Theorie der Beschäftigung, des Zinses und des Geldes des Ökonomen John Maynard Keynes durch „Konventionen“, also eine gemeinsame Bewertungseinschätzung der Marktteilnehmer, die zumeist deutlich durch Stimmungen beeinflusst werde.[17] Er hielt diese Umweltzustände zwar für stabil, sah jedoch die Stabilität nur dann als gegeben an, wenn es überwiegend Marktteilnehmer gäbe, die ihren besseren Informationsstand zu einem stabilen Kursgleichgewicht am Aktienmarkt nutzten.[18] Keynes skeptische Haltung zu den Aktienmärkten kommt insbesondere dadurch zum Ausdruck, dass er die Trennung zwischen Eigentümer und Management und die permanente Kursfeststellung als destabilisierend einstufte. Der Börsenkurs reflektiert heute das Marktgleichgewicht, durch das eine Markträumung erfolgt.

Aktienmärkte decken – zumindest teilweise – den Kapitalbedarf an Eigenkapital der Unternehmen, weil die Anleger die Aktien von einer Unternehmensgründung oder Kapitalerhöhung erwerben. Außerdem sorgen Aktienmärkte für die Verbreitung von Unternehmensdaten und für die Unternehmensbewertung durch die Kursbildung mit der Folge der aktienmarkttypischen Marktkapitalisierung. Allerdings ist diese wenig aussagekräftig, weil sie einerseits starken Bewertungsschwankungen ausgesetzt ist und andererseits die zu- oder abfließenden Geldströme nicht darstellt. Aktienmärkte übernehmen eine Ressourcenallokation, indem die Aktienkurse Signale über das Eigentum an Aktien ausstrahlen und im Idealfall alle erhältlichen Informationen reflektieren.[20] Der Aktienmarkt ermöglicht volkswirtschaftliches Wachstum, weil die Unternehmensfinanzierung teilweise durch Aktionäre übernommen wird und diese Kapazitätserweiterungen durch Gründungs- oder Erweiterungsinvestitionen mitfinanzieren. Aktien- und Rentenmarkt übernehmen bei der Wachstumsfinanzierung komplementäre Funktionen.[21]

Die auch auf Aktienmärkte anwendbare und von Eugene Fama 1970 aufgestellte Markteffizienzhypothese besagt, dass der Aktienmarkt Informationen sofort verarbeiten und in Kursen ausdrücken kann. Der Aktienmarkt sei hinsichtlich der Marktinformationen dann effizient, wenn kein Marktteilnehmer in der Lage sei, durch technische Analyse, Fundamentalanalyse oder Insiderhandel bei Transaktionen Gewinne erzielen zu können.[22]

Das Marktvolumen der umlaufenden Aktien betrug weltweit im Jahre 2015 insgesamt 146,5 Billionen US-Dollar Kurswert. Davon entfiel auf Nord- und Südamerika ein Anteil von rund 18 %, gefolgt von Asien/Pazifik (14 %) und Europa/Afrika/Mittlerer Osten (6 %). Das Marktvolumen (Nominalwerte) am deutschen Rentenmarkt belief sich im Jahre 2014 auf 3,1 Billionen Euro, während der Aktienmarkt ein Volumen von 1,5 Billionen Euro aufwies. Damit ist der Aktienmarkt nur halb so groß wie der Rentenmarkt.

Quelle: Seite „Aktienmarkt“. In: Wikipedia, Die freie Enzyklopädie. Bearbeitungsstand: 8. März 2017, 12:57 UTC. URL: https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aktienmarkt&oldid=163390880 (Abgerufen: 1. Januar 2018, 16:03 UTC)

Exchange (organized market)

An exchange, or bourse /bʊərs/ also known as a trading exchange, is an organized market where (especially) tradable securities, commodities, foreign exchange, futures, and options contracts are sold and bought.

History

The term bourse is derived from the 13th-century inn named Huis ter Beurze in Bruges, Belgium, where traders and foreign merchants from across Europe conducted business in the late medieval period.[1] The building, which was established by Robert van der Buerze as a hostelry, had operated from 1285.[citation needed] Its managers became famous for offering judicious financial advice to the traders and merchants who frequented the building. This service became known as the “Beurze Purse” which is the basis of bourse, meaning an organised place of exchange. Eventually the building became solely a place for trading in commodities.

During the 18th century, the façade of the Huis ter Beurze was rebuilt with a wide frontage of pilasters. However, in 1947 it was restored to its original medieval appearance.[citation needed]

In the twelfth century, foreign exchange dealers in France were responsible for controlling and regulating the debts of agricultural communities on behalf of banks. These were actually the first brokers. They met on the Grand Bridge in Paris, the current Pont au Change. It takes its name from the forex brokers.[citation needed]

In the thirteenth century, the Lombard bankers were the first to share state claims in Pisa, Genoa and Florence. In 1409, the phenomenon was institutionalized by the creation of the Exchange Bruges. It was quickly followed by others, in Flanders and neighboring countries (Ghent and Amsterdam). It is still in Belgium and the first building designed to house a scholarship was built in Antwerp. The first scholarship organized in France was born in Lyon in 1540.[citation needed]

The first documented crash took place in 1636 in Holland.[2] The prices of tulip bulbs reaching excessively high levels, known as the Tulip mania. The price collapsed on October 1.

In the seventeenth century, the Dutch were the first to use the stock market to finance companies.[3] The first company to issue stocks and bonds was the Dutch East India Company, introduced in 1602.

The London Stock Exchange started operating and listing shares and bonds in 1688.[4]

In 1774, the Paris Stock Exchange (founded in 1724), say the courts, must now necessarily be shouted to improve the transparency of operations.[citation needed] In the nineteenth century, the industrial revolution enables rapid development of stock markets, driven by the significant capital requirements for finance industry and transport. Since the computer revolution of the 1970s, we are witnessing the dematerialization of securities traded on the stock exchange.

In 1971, the NASDAQ became the primary market quotes computer. In France, the dematerialization was effective from November 5, 1984.[citation needed]

The development of information technology during the late part of the 20th century led to a new type of electronic exchange that replaced the more traditional physical markets. This led to new definitions in financial regulations that recognised these new exchanges, such as the Multilateral trading facility in Europe and Alternative trading system in the United States. Regulators also started using the term trading venue to describe the wider definition which encompasses both traditional exchanges and electronic exchanges.

Description

Exchanges bring together brokers and dealers who buy and sell these objects. These various financial instruments can typically be sold either through the exchange, typically with the benefit of a clearing house to reduce settlement risk.

Exchanges can be subdivided:

In practice, futures exchanges are usually commodity exchanges, i.e., all derivatives, including financial derivatives, are usually traded at commodity exchanges. This has historical reasons: the first exchanges were stock exchanges. In the 19th century, exchanges were opened to trade forward contracts on commodities. Exchange-traded forward contracts are called futures contracts. These “commodity exchanges” later started offering future contracts on other products, such as interest rates and shares, as well as options contracts; now they are generally known as futures exchanges.

For details, see:

See also

Source: Stock exchange, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stock_exchange&oldid=818052840 (last visited Jan. 1, 2018).

Börse

Eine Börse ist ein nach bestimmten Regeln organisierter Markt vertretbarer Sachen.

Gehandelt werden kann zum Beispiel mit Wertpapieren (etwa Aktien, Anleihen), Devisen, bestimmten Waren (z. B. Metalle und andere Rohstoffe) oder mit hiervon abgeleiteten Rechten. Die Börse führt Angebot und Nachfrage – vermittelt durch Makler (während definierter Handelszeiten) – marktmäßig zusammen und gleicht sie durch (amtliche) Festsetzung von Preisen (Kurse) aus. Die Feststellung der Kurse oder Preise der gehandelten Objekte richtet sich laufend nach Angebot und Nachfrage.

Hintergründe

Eine Börse dient der zeitlichen und örtlichen Konzentration des Handels von fungiblen Gütern unter beaufsichtigter Preisbildung. Ziele sind eine gesteigerte Markttransparenz für Wertpapiere, die Steigerung der Effizienz und der Marktliquidität, die Verringerung der Transaktionskosten sowie der Schutz vor Manipulationen. Anders als im außerbörslichen Handel (auch OTC-Handel von englisch over the counter genannt) wird börslicher Handel börsenaufsichtsrechtlich durch staatliche Aufsichtsämter (in Deutschland: die Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht (BaFin)) sowie durch die Handelsüberwachungsstellen der Börsen kontrolliert.

Durch den in der ISO 10383 geregelten Market Identifier Code ist jede Börse genau wie jede andere Handelsplattform weltweit eindeutig identifizierbar.

Für An- und Verkäufer von Finanzprodukten übernehmen die Börsen die wichtige Funktion der zentralen Gegenpartei (Central counterparty).

Börsenarten

Wichtige Börsenarten in der Aufteilung nach Art der Handelsgegenstände sind:

  • Warenbörse: Diese Börsen zum Handel von Waren, Produkten und Rohstoffen – ursprünglich vor allem von importierten und heimischen landwirtschaftlichen Erzeugnissen –, entstanden als erste Börsenart. Später entstanden Produktbörsen und Spezialbörsen, die sich auf bestimmte Welthandelsgüter wie Edelmetalle oder Kaffee spezialisierten.
  • Terminbörse oder Warenterminbörse: An diesen Börsen werden Warentermingeschäfte abgewickelt und Derivate gehandelt.
  • Wertpapierbörse oder Aktienbörse: Diese Börsen für den Handel mit Aktien und Anleihen bilden die heute wichtigste Börsenart, weshalb die allgemeine Bezeichnung Börse oft als ein Synonym für Aktienbörsen gebraucht wird.
  • Devisenbörse: Für den Handel von Devisen in Fremdwährungen.

Weitere Börsenarten oder börsenähnlich organisierte Märkte sind:

Börsenformen

Die klassische Form der Börse ist die Präsenzbörse (auch Parketthandel genannt). Dort treffen sich die Makler in persona und schließen durch Gespräche ihre Geschäfte ab. Dies geschieht entweder im Eigenhandel oder im Auftrag ihrer Kunden.

Bei Computerbörsen wie beim vollelektronischen Handelsplatz Xetra übernimmt ein Computerprogramm die Berechnungen und die Kommunikation. Hier werden Eingaben über Dialogfenster gemacht; das Computersystem wickelt den Handel ab und errechnet die Kurse (z. B. den Tagesdurchschnitt). Der Hauptanteil des Umsatzes wird gegenwärtig weltweit über computergestützte Börsen abgewickelt, wobei teilweise die Makler selbst am Bildschirm sitzen.

Für die Abwicklung von Lieferung und Zahlung haben sich zwischen den Marktteilnehmern teilweise nicht kodifizierte (nicht festgeschriebene) Usancen gebildet. Daneben wurden in der letzten Zeit in Deutschland auch Anweisungen der Bundesanstalt für Finanzdienstleistungsaufsicht über die Mindestanforderungen im Handel mit Wertpapieren veröffentlicht (beispielsweise zu Aktien und Obligationen).

Handelsformen

Nach der Handelsformen können Börsen wie folgt unterschieden werden:

Frühere Formen waren:

  • a la criée: Die Kauf- und Verkaufsaufträge werden durch gegenseitige Zurufe getätigt.

Nach Art der Abwicklung des Handels:

Eine weitere Unterscheidung ist nach der Art des Börsenhandels.

Handelszeiten

Börsen sind an Handelstagen geöffnet. Bei den Handelszeiten (oder Börsenzeiten) an allen Börsen wird unterschieden zwischen dem Parketthandel und dem Computerhandel (wie zum Beispiel Xetra). Kleinere Börsen verfügen oftmals nur über den Parketthandel. Der Parketthandel beginnt an den Börsen Frankfurt und Stuttgart um 08:00 Uhr Ortszeit (bezogen auf Deutschland), an den Börsen Berlin, Düsseldorf und München ebenfalls um 08:00 Uhr, er endet um 20:00 Uhr Ortszeit und in Stuttgart um 22:00 Uhr. Der Xetra beginnt um 9:00 Uhr und endet bereits um 17:30 Uhr Ortszeit. Die Handelszeiten der NASDAQ, der größten elektronischen Börse in den USA, und der NYSE sind von 9:30 bis 16:00 New Yorker Ortszeit (EST), was 15:30 bis 22:00 Uhr deutscher Zeit (MEZ) entspricht.

Die Tokioter Börse hat ihre Handelszeiten von 9:00 Uhr bis 11:30 Uhr und 12:30 Uhr bis 15:00 Uhr Ortszeit (entspricht 1:00 Uhr bis 3:30 Uhr und 4:30 Uhr bis 7:00 Uhr MEZ).

Rechtssicherheit

An den Börsen gelten besondere Handelsbräuche, sogenannte Börsenusancen. Anders als bei normalen Geschäften möchte man im schnelllebigen Börsenhandel schnell Rechtssicherheit haben, so dass die nachträgliche Aufhebung von Wertpapiergeschäften aufgrund von z.B. Irrtümern nur in einem sehr eingeschränkten Zeitraum (typischerweise 30 Minuten) möglich ist. Siehe Fristen für Mistradeanträge.

Wichtige Handelsplätze

International bedeutende Börsenplätze sind

Börse Stadt Land
New York City Vereinigte Staaten Vereinigte Staaten
Chicago Vereinigte Staaten Vereinigte Staaten
London Vereinigtes Königreich Großbritannien
Tokio Japan Japan
Shanghai Volksrepublik China Volksrepublik China
Shenzhen Volksrepublik China Volksrepublik China
Amsterdam,
Paris,
Lissabon,
Brüssel
Niederlande Niederlande
Frankreich Frankreich
Portugal Portugal
Belgien Belgien
Frankfurt am Main Deutschland Deutschland
Mailand Italien Italien
Hongkong Hongkong Hongkong
Toronto Kanada Kanada
Zürich Schweiz Schweiz
Singapur Singapur Singapur
Sydney Australien Australien
São Paulo Brasilien Brasilien

Nach Marktkapitalisierung und Handelsumsätzen gemessen ist der wichtigste Handelsverbund für den CEE-Raum die CEE Stock Exchange Group. Danach folgt die polnische Warschauer Börse, die bezüglich der Marktkapitalisierung bereits größer ist als die Wiener Börse – betrachtet man diese eigenständig.

Die weltweiten Börsen sind mit einem täglichen Transaktionsvolumen von etwa 2 Billionen US-Dollar ein entscheidender Faktor der Weltwirtschaft.

Börsenplatz Deutschland

In Deutschland gibt es acht Wertpapierbörsen, eine Devisenbörse, eine Wertpapierterminbörse und eine Warenterminbörse.

Die wichtigste Börse in Deutschland ist die Frankfurter Wertpapierbörse (FWB), einschließlich der Handelsplätze Xetra und Börse Frankfurt. Ein Großteil des Aktienhandels in Deutschland wird über die Handelsplätze Xetra und Börse Frankfurt abgewickelt (März 2008: Anteil am Handel mit deutschen Aktien rund 98 Prozent, bei ausländischen Aktien rund 84 Prozent.[6]) Ausgehend vom Handel mit Sorten und Wechselbriefen im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert und dem ab 1820 beginnenden Aktienhandel hat sich die FWB seitdem zu einer der führenden internationalen Börsen für Aktien und Anleihen entwickelt. Trägerin und Betreiberin ist die Deutsche Börse AG.

Außerdem gibt es in Deutschland noch sieben weitere Wertpapierbörsen (die bis auf Tradegate und European Energy Exchange auch als Regionalbörsen bezeichnet werden). Unter diesen ist die Börse Stuttgart (Baden-Württembergische Wertpapierbörse) mit einem durchschnittlichen Anteil von 34 Prozent am Orderbuchumsatz des deutschen Parketthandels zweitgrößter Handelsplatz. Von besonderer Bedeutung ist der Handel von verbrieften Derivaten, wie Optionsscheinen (Handelssegment Euwax). An den Wertpapierbörsen in Hamburg und Hannover, die unter der gemeinsamen Träger- und Betreibergesellschaft Börsen AG den dritten Rang der deutschen Börsen einnehmen, nimmt hingegen der Fondshandel eine bedeutende Stellung ein.

Nach Auflösung der Bremer Börse 2007 bestehen außer der Börse in Frankfurt noch folgende deutsche Börsen:

1897 gab es noch folgende Börsen in Deutschland: Berlin, Breslau, Danzig, Düsseldorf, Elbing, Essen, Frankfurt am Main, Gleiwitz, Halle an der Saale, Königsberg, Magdeburg, Memel, Posen, Stettin (alle Preußen), München, Augsburg (Bayern), Leipzig, Dresden, Zwickau, Chemnitz (Sachsen), Stuttgart (Württemberg), Mannheim (Baden), Mülhausen, Straßburg (Elsaß-Lothringen), Bremen, Hamburg, Lübeck.[7]

Von den Nationalsozialisten wurden 1934 die bisher 21 deutschen Börsen zu 9 Börsen zusammengefasst: Berlin, Breslau, Hannover, Stuttgart, Hamburg (Bremen und Lübeck gingen in dieser Börse auf), die Sächsische oder Mitteldeutsche Börse in Leipzig (Dresden, Zwickau, Halle und Chemnitz gingen in dieser Börse auf), die Rheinisch-westfälische Börse in Düsseldorf (Essen und Köln gingen in dieser Börse auf), die Rhein-Mainische Börse in Frankfurt (mit Mannheim) und die Bayerische Börse in München (mit Augsburg).[8]

Börsenplatz USA

Die wichtigsten Börsen in den USA sind die NYSE Amex (früher American Stock Exchange), die Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), die National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations (NASDAQ), die New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) und die New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). Älteste amerikanische Börse ist die 1790 gegründete Philadelphia Stock Exchange.

Dark Trade

Der überwiegende Teil des Handels findet außerbörslich statt. In Deutschland rund die Hälfte, in den USA etwa zwei Drittel des Gesamtvolumens. Ein erheblicher Teil der Transaktionen geschieht verdeckt und nicht öffentlich. Dark Pools sind eine spezielle Form von Handelsplätzen, die dazu dienen, Auftragsbestand und Marktteilnehmer zu verdunkeln. Diese Intransparenz liegt insbesondere im Interesse institutioneller Investoren. In den USA hat sich der Anteil reiner Dark Pools am abgewickelten Volumen in den Jahren 2008 bis 2014 von 8 % auf 15 % fast verdoppelt. Da diese Handelsform einem Kundenbedürfnis entspricht, werden Dark Pools auch an den regulären Börsen angeboten, so betreibt die Schweizer Börse SIX Liquidnet Service und die Deutsche Börse Xetra Midpoint. Auch Großbanken wie UBS und Credit Suisse betreiben eigene Dark Pools.

Siehe auch

Quelle: Seite „Börse“. In: Wikipedia, Die freie Enzyklopädie. Bearbeitungsstand: 20. November 2017, 12:59 UTC. URL: https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=B%C3%B6rse&oldid=171194669 (Abgerufen: 1. Januar 2018, 15:44 UTC

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