Wall Street
History
Stock Market is an avenue from which
stocks of companies are bought and sold.
For some, they thought that stock market and Wall Street are
the same. Wall Street in New York is just one example of a
stock market.
Wall Street though is very significant in a sense that this
is were the concept of stock market started.
The Wall Street establishment was built in 1653. Its purpose
then is for defense and not for commerce. Dutch settlers
fortressed themselves from Native Americans and British by
building a 12 foot stockade fence,
In 1685, the wall was torn down and replaced by a new
street. The British named it Wall Street.
The Stock Exchange
Wall Street is made famous with the emergence of two
powerful stock exchanges. This resulted in the chaotic trading
which turned out to be the financial markets that we know
today.
The first stock exchange in the United States was founded in
1790 in Philadelphia. Two years later, a group of New York
traders met and thought about setting up a security business.
These 24-man groups are the founders of the New York Stock
Exchange.
In 1817, the New York merchants were upset by the bad state
of their stock exchange.
They sent one of their members to Philadelphia to take a look
at their trading. The representative found out that
Philadelphia is doing well in their exchange. The merchant
returned to New York and discussed to the group how things were
being done in Philadelphia. Shortly after, the “New York Stock
and Exchange Board” was formally organized.
The exchange center was inaugurated on Wall Street. The rest
was history. From a troubled beginning, the New York Stock
exchange emerged as the place where billions of dollars worth
of stocks and bonds are traded each day.
But the success of Wall Street did not happen overnight. In
the early 1990’s, the New York Stock Exchange was already on
the rise. But this financial boom could not be sustained. In
1929, the stock market crashed, shocked the world and caused
the Great Depression.
Although the economy eventually recovered, the mistakes of
the Great Depression haunted them back. In 1987, the stock
market again crashed. The crash was so crippling that the Dow
Jones suffered the largest single-day loss in the stock
market’s history.
Since then, the government and the industry have been trying
to set up measures to prevent such a large-scale crash. Now,
the stock market is an essential component in the world’s
economy. Proper safeguards and systems to reduce or prevent
another stock market crash are of utmost importance.
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