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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 XVIII. The stock exchange as an international market
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

STOCK EXCHANGE AN INTERNATIONAL MARKET 509 
notion that only physical goods are bought and sold among 
nations. To be true, our monthly government reports of the 
foreign exports and imports of the United States include only 
the physical merchandise and raw materials which are loaded 
or unloaded as ship cargoes, and which pass inspection of our 
customs officials at our various ports. This part of our total 
sales to and purchases from foreign countries is known as our 
“visible” trade, and the statistics upon it have long been 
collected by our various customs houses and consolidated 
in the monthly foreign trade report of United States ex- 
ports and imports issued by the Department of Commerce in 
\Washineton. 
The “Invisible Trade.”—Yet this buying and selling of 
physical (and therefore ‘‘visible”’) goods between nations 
constitutes only a portion, albeit the largest and most funda- 
mental one, of our total international traffic. For as a 
nation, we also are buyers and sellers in the “invisible” 
trade in what, for want of a better term, are known as ‘“‘ser- 
vices.” This elastic term of “services” covers a multitude of 
different transactions. If an American exporting firm hires 
a British vessel or a Canadian railroad to carry its goods into 
Great Britain or Canada, it is importing transportation service. 
If either cargo is insured in the course of transit by a foreign 
insurance company, this service too constitutes an American 
import. When a foreign immigrant here sends money back 
to the “old country,” America may likewise be said, in the 
economic sense, to be importing the service of his hands and 
brains from the country whither his funds are sent. When 
furthermore, the American ventures abroad, whether to study 
in the Sorbonne, to admire cathedral towns, or simply to enjoy 
a vacation in any foreign country, the grim laws of economics 
score his expenditures down as another American import— 
whether of learning, artistic appreciation, or mere pleasure. 
Gold is also, of course, bought and sold between nations, and 
is naturally a visible import or export. Because of its special
	        

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