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The work of the Stock Exchange

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fullscreen: The work of the Stock Exchange

Monograph

Identifikator:
1831284952
URN:
urn:nbn:de:zbw-retromon-225876
Document type:
Monograph
Author:
Meeker, James Edward http://d-nb.info/gnd/126597340
Title:
The work of the Stock Exchange
Edition:
Revised edition
Place of publication:
New York
Publisher:
The Ronald Press Company
Year of publication:
[1930]
Scope:
XVI, 720 Seiten
Illustrationen, Diagramme
Digitisation:
2022
Collection:
Economics Books
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Chapter

Document type:
Monograph
Structure type:
Chapter
Title:
Chapter VII. Credit transactions in securities
Collection:
Economics Books

Contents

Table of contents

  • The work of the Stock Exchange
  • Title page
  • Contents
  • Chapter I. The evolution of securities
  • Chapter II. Organized security markets and their economic functions
  • Chapter III. The rise of the New York stock exchange
  • Chapter IV. The distribution of securities
  • Chapter V. The dangers and benefits of stock speculation
  • Chapter VI. A typical investment transaction
  • Chapter VII. Credit transactions in securities
  • Chapter VIII. The floor trader and the specialist
  • Chapter IX. The odd-lot business
  • Chapter X. The bond market
  • Chapter XI. The security collateral loan market
  • Chapter XII. Comparison and security clearance
  • Chapter XIII. Security delivieries, loans, and transfers
  • Chapter XIV. Money clearance and settlement
  • Chapter XV. The commission house
  • Chapter XVI. The administration of the stock exchange
  • Chapter XVII. The stock exchange and American business
  • Chapter XVIII. The stock exchange as an international market

Full text

200 THE WORK OF THE STOCK EXCHANGE 
due to new and untried legislation had fostered a heavy short interest 
n the market, thereby furnishing the best safeguard against a sudden 
and disastrous drop. This short interest was a leading factor in pro- 
ducing the extraordinary resistance of prices in New York which 
caused so much favorable comment during the few days before the 
closing (of the Stock Exchange). It were well if ill-informed people 
who deprecate short selling would note this fact. 
On the other hand, the violence of the 1929 stock panic 
san be largely attributed to the remarkably small short interest 
in the stock market.'® 
Stabilization of Security Prices.—In conclusion, there- 
fore, it may be said that the effect of margin purchases and 
short sales is really to stabilize prices, that this result is bene- 
ficial to both buyers and sellers, and that in an economic sense 
the undue inflation of prices above values is just as dangerous 
to everyone concerned as their undue depression below values. 
If, therefore, short selling were prevented, an effective check 
would be removed from an upward trend of prices which in the 
long run would be bound to fall again with a crash, while the 
support to prices which a short interest provides in just such a 
declining market would also be removed.* 
Legislation Against the Short Sale—The popular mis- 
snderstanding and prejudice against short selling of securities 
s not new. As long as the stock exchanges of the world have 
-xisted the short sale has been bitterly condemned, but invari- 
ably indorsed after thorough investigation or painful experi- 
ence, as a vital and indispensable factor in the maintenance of 
free securities markets everywhere.’ As an operation neces- 
sary in organized speculative markets it has, therefore, stood 
that hardest of all tests—the test of time. Short selling was 
forbidden in England by Sir John Bernard's Act in 1733; yet 
this law failed to halt the practice, and in 1860 it was repealed. 
18 See Appendix Vlle. 
19 See Appendix VII{, 
0 See Appendix Vig.
	        

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The Work of the Stock Exchange. The Ronald Press Company, 1930.
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