Everything that existed in this world has its history, if we talk about Humans they have their history, if we talk about Animals or Plants they have their history and same goes with Foods and Machines, so where ever we look or whatever we see has its history.Now today we are going to talk about
the HISTORY OF STOCK MARKET.
the HISTORY OF STOCK MARKET.
The History of stock market is as OLD as Ancient World. It has the up and downs like we humans have in our lives. It's not a one day show it took centuries for it to get here at this point where it's now become so easy to invest in stocks that one can do it in PAJAMAS on his/her bed.
Source: Wikipedia
The idea of debt dates back to the ancient world, as
evidenced for example by ancient Mesopotamian clay tablets recording interest-bearing
loans. There is little consensus among scholars as to when corporate stock was
first traded. Some see the key event as the Dutch East India Company's founding
in 1602, while others point to earlier developments. Economist Ulrike
Malmendier of the University of California at Berkeley argues that a share
market existed as far back as ancient Rome.
In the Roman Republic, which existed for centuries before
the Empire was founded, there were societates publicanorum, organizations of
contractors or leaseholders who performed temple-building and other services
for the government. One such service was the feeding of geese on the Capitoline
Hill as a reward to the birds after their honking warned of a Gallic invasion
in 390 B.C. Participants in such organizations had partes or shares, a concept
mentioned various times by the statesman and orator Cicero. In one speech,
Cicero mentions "shares that had a very high price at the time." Such
evidence, in Malmendier's view, suggests the instruments were tradable, with
fluctuating values based on an organization's success. The societas declined
into obscurity in the time of the emperors, as most of their services were
taken over by direct agents of the state.
Tradable bonds as a commonly used type of security were a
more recent innovation, spearheaded by the Italian city-states of the late
medieval and early Renaissance periods.
In 1171, the authorities of the Republic of Venice,
concerned about their war-depleted treasury, drew a forced loan from the
citizenry. Such debt, known as prestiti, paid 5 percent interest per year and
had an indefinite maturity date. Initially regarded with suspicion, it came to
be seen as a valuable investment that could be bought and sold. The bond market
had begun.
From 1262 to 1379, Venice never missed an interest payment,
solidifying the credibility of the new instruments. Other Italian city-states
such as Florence and Genoa became bond issuers as well, often as a means of
paying for warfare. Bonds were traded widely in Italy and beyond, a business
facilitated by bankers such as the Medicis.
War between Venice and Genoa resulted in suspension of
prestiti interest payments in the early 1380s, and when the market was
restored, it was at a lower interest rate. Venice's bonds traded at steep
discounts for decades thereafter. Other blows to financial stability resulted
from the Hundred Years War, which caused monarchs of France and England to
default on debts to Italian banks, and the Black Death, which ravaged much of Europe.
Still, the idea of debt as a tradable investment endured.
As with bonds, the concept of stock developed gradually.
Some scholars place its origins as far back as ancient Rome. Partnership
agreements dividing ownership into shares date back at least to the 13th
century, again with Italian city-states in the vanguard. Such arrangements,
however, typically extended only to a handful of people and were of limited
duration, as with shipping partnerships that applied only to a single sea
voyage.
House Ter Beurze in Bruges, Belgium.
The forefront of commercial innovation eventually shifted
from Italy to northern Europe. The Hanseatic League, an alliance of mercantile
cities such as Bruges and Antwerp, operated counting houses to expedite trade.
By the late 1500s, English merchants were experimenting with
joint-stock companies intended to operate on an ongoing basis; one such was the
Muscovy Company, which sought to wrest trade with Russia away from hanseatic
dominance.
The next big step occurred in the Netherlands. In 1602, the
Dutch East India Company was formed as a joint-stock company based in six
locations with shares that were readily tradable. The stock market had begun,
but since stocks were not allowed to be traded with multiple addresses for a company,
the stocks were redesignated as coming just from Amsterdam.
A bond issued by the Dutch East India Company, dating from 7
November 1623, for the amount of 2,400 florins.
The Dutch East India Company, formed to build up the spice
trade, operated as a colonial ruler in what's now Indonesia and beyond, a
purview that included conducting military operations against wishes of the
exploited natives and competing colonial powers. Control of the company was
held tightly by its directors, with ordinary shareholders not having much
influence on management or even access to the company's accounting statements.
However, shareholders were rewarded well for their
investment. The company paid an average dividend of over 16 percent per year
from 1602 to 1650. Financial innovation in Amsterdam took many forms. In 1609,
investors led by one Isaac Le Maire formed history's first bear syndicate, but
their coordinated trading had only a modest impact in driving down share
prices, which tended to be robust throughout the 17th century. By the 1620s,
the company was expanding its securities issuance with the first use of
corporate bonds.
The Dutch West India Company was formed in 1621, bringing a
new issuer to the burgeoning securities market. Amsterdam's growth as a
financial center survived the tulip mania of the 1630s, in which contracts for
the delivery of flower bulbs soared wildly and then crashed. New techniques and
instruments proliferated for securities as well as commodities, including
options, repos and margin trading. [4]
Joseph de la Vega, also known as Joseph Penso de la Vega and
by other variations of his name, was an Amsterdam trader from a Spanish Jewish
family and a prolific writer as well as a successful businessman in
17th-century Amsterdam. His 1688 book Confusion of Confusions explained the
workings of the city's stock market. It was the earliest book about stock
trading, taking the form of a dialogue between a merchant, a shareholder and a
philosopher, the book described a market that was sophisticated but also prone
to excesses, and de la Vega offered advice to his readers on such topics as the
unpredictability of market shifts and the importance of patience in investment.
The year that de la Vega published also brought an event
that helped spread financial techniques and talent from Amsterdam to London.
This was the "glorious revolution," in which Dutch ruler William of
Orange also ascended to England's throne. William sought to modernize England's
finances to pay for its wars, and thus the kingdom's first government bonds
were issued in 1693 and the Bank of England was set up the following year. Soon
thereafter, English joint-stock companies began going public.
London's first stockbrokers, however, were barred from the
old commercial center known as the Royal Exchange, reportedly because of their
rude manners. Instead, the new trade was conducted from coffee houses along
Exchange Alley. By 1698, a broker named John Castaing, operating out of
Jonathan's Coffee House, was posting regular lists of stock and commodity
prices. Those lists mark the beginning of the London Stock Exchange.
One of history's greatest financial bubbles occurred in the
next few decades. At the center of it were the South Sea Company, set up in
1711 to conduct English trade with South America, and the Mississippi Company,
focused on commerce with France's Louisiana colony and touted by transplanted
Scottish financier John Law, who was acting in effect as France's central
banker. Investors snapped up shares in both, and whatever else was available.
In 1720, at the height of the mania, there was even an offering of "a
company for carrying out an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know
what it is."
By the end of that same year, share prices were collapsing,
as it became clear that expectations of imminent wealth from the Americas were
overblown. In London, Parliament passed the Bubble Act, which stated that only
royally chartered companies could issue public shares. In Paris, Law was
stripped of office and fled the country. Stock trading was more limited and
subdued in subsequent decades. Yet the market survived, and by the 1790s shares
were being traded in the young United States.
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