Full text: The work of the Stock Exchange

CREDIT TRANSACTIONS IN SECURITIES 201 
Similar English legislation later adopted to prevent short sell- 
ing of bank stocks has also been more honored in the breach 
than in the observance. 
Such, too, has been the experience of France. Napoleon 1 
was dissuaded from forbidding it only by his Finance Minister ; 
later on, the French did legislate against the practice only to 
repeal the law after its futility and harmfulness were clearly 
shown. The state of New York has tried the same experiment 
and with the same result; it prohibited short sales early in 1812, 
only to remove the ban against them in 1858. Last but not 
least is the example of Germany. In 1896 a stringent regula- 
tion of the Berlin Boerse (or Stock Exchange) was under- 
taken by the government and again short selling was forbidden, 
to be reinstated by the repeal of this legislation in 190g. But 
a famous American economist has stated 2 
Finally, the effect of interference, increased cost, and legal un- 
certainty (entailed by this restriction of stock transactions) was to 
drive business to foreign exchanges and diminish the power of the 
Berlin Exchange in the field of international finance. The number 
of agencies of foreign houses increased four or fivefold, and much 
German capital flowed to other centers, especially London, for invest- 
ment and speculation. This in turn weakened the power of the Berlin 
money market, so that even the Reichsbank has at times felt its serious 
effects. 
So long as optimists are more popular than pessimists, buy- 
ing on margin will doubtless seem to many people a more bene- 
ficial operation than short selling. So long as men think on 
the money rather than the goods side of sales, short selling will 
doubtless remain more mysterious to the public than margin 
purchasing. So long as the fallacious benefits of inflation can 
claim a popular following, whatever tends to lift prices above 
values will continue to be generally judged preferable to what- 
ever may depress them below values. And thus, while perhaps 
human nature will always condemn the short sale, genuine 
economic utility will invariably favor its employment. 
# Emery in “Regulation of the Stock Exchange,” p. 828.
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.