The Birth Of the Stock Market
This is a story about how the stock exchange started. It starts in the 1600's.How the Stock Exchange Began
What are Shares: For Beginners
Marcus Padley | July 24th 2024 | Education Corner
THE BIRTH OF THE STOCK MARKET Modern day investors can buy and sell stocks at the click of a button. We can see the price and details of any stock in the world, and, with a quick google search and can get our rolling market fix daily through TV, radio and online news sources. But it wasn’t always like this… As many of you already know, investing, shares and our market in general have been constantly evolving. Moving from physical dealing slips, to phone orders - with traders all huddled in cubicles or yelling in a ring - into what we see today. But to see what it really all started as, long before you or I were born, we need to take a little trip back in time. Imagine this.- 16th Century England, Queen Elizabeth runs the place (the original Elizabeth) and she’s changing things up from Henry XIII’s leadership style (her dad) to support a bit of global exploration.
- The most notable of the Elizabethan seamen was Sir Francis Drake, who came to favour after circumnavigating the globe. Drake made a fortune shipping slaves, while his young nephew Sir Walter Raleigh tried to populate and settle the New World, which of course is what we now know as America.
- The New World had slaves, bananas and tobacco, amongst other things, all of which didn’t exist in England. It was an early ‘tech boom’ of sorts. All you had to do was get there, buy or steal the stuff and get back. Easy money. The only problem was actually getting there. And in the 16th century, the only way was by boat.
- The early entrepreneurs spent years putting together the capital (money) necessary to fund a voyage. To raise the capital, they would sell contracts offering the bearer a “share” of the profits made from selling the ship’s cargo (slaves, bananas, tobacco, etc.) upon its return. Bearer shares.
- With the money raised the investors would buy a ship, select a captain, appoint officers and find a crew. With the team in place off they would head off over the horizon.
- The Ship is the Company - The success or otherwise of the venture depended on the quality of the ship. Quality ships produced better returns.
- The CEO - The success of the venture depends on the skills of the Captain (the CEO). If you had Sir Francis Drake or Walter Raleigh as the captain of your ship you were lucky, they were good, experienced seamen. Your shares in the ship’s cargo even before it returned would be worth more. In the same way, a good CEO adds value to any investment.
- Management, Management, Management - The officers are the management. How experienced and capable they are has a big bearing on the value of your investment.
- The crew are the workforce. How much do they need to be paid? Will they mutiny? Will they strike? Are there too many? Should a few be thrown overboard? All questions that must be dealt with on a 16th century ship and in modern day business.
Discover the key to successful ETF investing with our free 5-part video series, 'Timing the Market Using ETFs'.
Join Marcus Padley as he shares essential tips and strategies to help you navigate the market confidently - Sign up now.
That sort of uncertainty might have prompted holders of shares in a ship to want to sell their shares before the ship's return. Or their circumstances might have changed, making them to want to realise (sell) the value of your investment before the end of the venture (return of the ship). But without a telephone, a computer, let alone the internet, to get in touch with a broker as we do today, just who would you sell it to, and where would you find them? In 16th century London the place was the coffee houses. That’s where you would go to sell contracts which offer you a share in a ship’s cargo. But often the potential buyer wasn’t there. It wasn’t as if everyone was buzzing about in cars, or could pick up the mobile phone, so the coffee house waiters learnt a new art. “Jobbing”. The original market makers. They would buy the shares as an intermediary with the intention of selling them on when the buyer came in. Depending on the information flow in the meantime, they might be able to make a little something for their troubles. Keeping them a smidge more comfortable than cappuccinos alone would have. Fast forward a few years to 1698 and a list of stock and commodity prices was posted at Jonathan’s Coffee House in London in Change Alley (now Exchange Alley) on the original site of the London Stock Exchange. And so was born the stock exchange, with the coffee waiters to thank as the first stockjobbers (price makers). The guards (the waiters as they are known) that patrol the London Stock Exchange continued to wear the same blue tunics with red lapels worn by the first waiters in the London coffee houses until the switch from physical trading floor to electronic systems. And that's where the London Stock Exchange came from. More about the author – Marcus Padley Marcus Padley is a highly-recognised stockbroker and business media personality. He founded the Marcus Today Stock Market Newsletter in 1998. Over the years, the business has built a community of like-minded investors who want to survive and thrive in the stock market. This is achieved through a combination of daily stock market education, ideas and activities.