CHAPTER VIL THE WORLD'S STOCK MARKETS. Every important commercial centre has a Stock Exchange of its own, and the dealings in every one of these Stock Exchanges are naturally confined to those securities which are held by the public of the neighbourhood in which each Stock Exchange is situated. Some stocks are held in many quarters of the globe. Dealings in them therefore take place on a large number of Stock Exchanges. Other, or so-called “local ” stocks, are not so widely distributed, and therefore not so universally dealt in. It is really not the size of a stock which determines its number of regular markets, but simply the manner in which it is distributed among the population of the world. Thus, there are some large and important stocks representing millions of capi tal which have only one principal market, like British Consols, the only real market for these being London ; whilst comparatively much smaller issues, like the loans of the Turkish Empire, are dealt in on nearly every Stock Exchange in Europe.