3:34
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How the Stock Exchange works
Why are there stocks at all?
Everyday in the news we hear about the stock exchange, stock...
published: 28 Nov 2013
How the Stock Exchange works
How the Stock Exchange works
Why are there stocks at all? Everyday in the news we hear about the stock exchange, stocks and money moving around the globe. Still, a lot of people don't have an idea why we have stock markets at all, because the topic is usually very dry. We made a short video about the basics of the stock exchanges. With robots. Robots are kewl! Short videos, explaining things. For example Evolution, the Universe, the Stock Market or controversial topics like Fracking. Because we love science. We would love to interact more with you, our viewers to figure out what topics you want to see. If you have a suggestion for future videos or feedback, drop us a line! :) We're a bunch of Information designers from munich, visit us on facebook or behance to say hi! https://www.facebook.com/Kurzgesagt http://www.behance.net/PhilippDettmer How the Stock Exchange works- published: 28 Nov 2013
- views: 7679
19:37
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What is a stock exchange? - MoneyWeek Investment Tutorials
Tim Bennett, explains everything an investor needs to know about stock exchanges in an eas...
published: 20 Oct 2011
author: MoneyWeekVideos
What is a stock exchange? - MoneyWeek Investment Tutorials
What is a stock exchange? - MoneyWeek Investment Tutorials
Tim Bennett, explains everything an investor needs to know about stock exchanges in an easy to understand version fit for beginners and advanced investors al...- published: 20 Oct 2011
- views: 38758
- author: MoneyWeekVideos
9:13
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How the Stock Market Works
http://www.incomeinvesthome.com/free/ Go there now for free report on 7 Reasons to Invest ...
published: 06 Aug 2009
author: incomeinvestor
How the Stock Market Works
How the Stock Market Works
http://www.incomeinvesthome.com/free/ Go there now for free report on 7 Reasons to Invest for Income -- Now More Than Ever. Put your money to work. This old ...- published: 06 Aug 2009
- views: 504605
- author: incomeinvestor
6:58
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What Is A Stock Exchange - A Beginners Guide
Brought to you by http://www.HowToInvestInShares.co.uk - the subject of this video is: Wha...
published: 20 Apr 2012
author: SharesCoach
What Is A Stock Exchange - A Beginners Guide
What Is A Stock Exchange - A Beginners Guide
Brought to you by http://www.HowToInvestInShares.co.uk - the subject of this video is: What Is A Stock Exchange? 0:26 Stock Exchange vs Stock Market 1:00 Why...- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 4614
- author: SharesCoach
2:57
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New York Stock Exchange Opening Bell
Opening the New York Stock Exchange....
published: 27 Nov 2012
author: Kendra Chao
New York Stock Exchange Opening Bell
New York Stock Exchange Opening Bell
Opening the New York Stock Exchange.- published: 27 Nov 2012
- views: 50
- author: Kendra Chao
30:01
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Stock Market Tutorial - The Only Video You'll Ever Need
Epic Stock Due Diligence ("EpicStockDD") Welcome to Epic Stock Due Diligence (http://youtu...
published: 02 Nov 2012
author: Epic Stock Due Diligence
Stock Market Tutorial - The Only Video You'll Ever Need
Stock Market Tutorial - The Only Video You'll Ever Need
Epic Stock Due Diligence ("EpicStockDD") Welcome to Epic Stock Due Diligence (http://youtube.com/EpicStockDD)! I wanted to create a source for stock market h...- published: 02 Nov 2012
- views: 228049
- author: Epic Stock Due Diligence
2:26
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Understand the fundamentals of how a stock exchange works.
http://www.thegreatcourses.com/moneyandbanking....
published: 18 Jun 2012
author: TheGreatCourses
Understand the fundamentals of how a stock exchange works.
Understand the fundamentals of how a stock exchange works.
http://www.thegreatcourses.com/moneyandbanking.- published: 18 Jun 2012
- views: 1335
- author: TheGreatCourses
0:38
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Trading Floor at New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
NYSE seen from the members gallery on August 9, 2007....
published: 10 Aug 2007
author: EH11937
Trading Floor at New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
Trading Floor at New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
NYSE seen from the members gallery on August 9, 2007.- published: 10 Aug 2007
- views: 229169
- author: EH11937
35:48
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An Overview of the New York Stock Exchange: Building, Trading Floor, History (1998)
The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), sometimes known as the "Big Board", is a stock exchang...
published: 29 Mar 2014
An Overview of the New York Stock Exchange: Building, Trading Floor, History (1998)
An Overview of the New York Stock Exchange: Building, Trading Floor, History (1998)
The New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), sometimes known as the "Big Board", is a stock exchange located at 11 Wall Street, Lower Manhattan, New York City, New York, United States. It is by far the world's largest stock exchange by market capitalization of its listed companies at US$16.613 trillion as of May 2013. Average daily trading value was approximately US$169 billion in 2013. The NYSE trading floor is located at 11 Wall Street and is composed of four rooms used for the facilitation of trading. A fifth trading room, located at 30 Broad Street, was closed in February 2007. The main building, located at 18 Broad Street, between the corners of Wall Street and Exchange Place, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978, as was the 11 Wall Street building. The NYSE is operated by NYSE Euronext (NYSE: NYX), which was formed by the NYSE's 2007 merger with the fully electronic stock exchange Euronext. In December 2012, it was announced that the company would be sold to Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), a futures exchange headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, United States, for $8 billion, a figure that is significantly less than the $11 billion bid for the company tendered in 2011. The origin of the NYSE can be traced to May 17, 1792, when the Buttonwood Agreement was signed by 24 stockbrokers outside of 68 Wall Street in New York under a buttonwood tree on Wall Street.[10] On March 8, 1817, the organization drafted a constitution and renamed itself the "New York Stock & Exchange Board". Anthony Stockholm was elected the Exchange's first president. The last central location of the Exchange was a room, rented in 1792 for $200 a month, located at 40 Wall Street. After that location was destroyed in the Great Fire of New York in 1835, the Exchange moved to a temporary headquarters. In 1863, the New York Stock & Exchange Board changed to its current name, the New York Stock Exchange. In 1865, the Exchange moved to 10--12 Broad Street. The New York Stock Exchange was closed for ten days starting September 20, 1873, because of the Panic of 1873.[11] The volume of stocks traded increased sixfold in the years between 1896 and 1901, and a larger space was required to conduct business in the expanding marketplace.[12] Eight New York City architects were invited to participate in a design competition for a new building; ultimately, the Exchange selected the neoclassic design submitted by architect George B. Post. Demolition of the Exchange building at 10 Broad Street, and adjacent buildings, started on May 10, 1901. The main façade featuring six tall columns with Corinthian capitals The new building, located at 18 Broad Street, cost $4 million and opened on April 22, 1903. The trading floor, at 109 × 140 feet (33 × 42.5 m), was one of the largest volumes of space in the city at the time, and had a skylight set into a 72-foot (22 m)-high ceiling. The main façade of the building features six tall columns with Corinthian capitals, topped by a marble pediment containing high-relief sculptures by John Quincy Adams Ward with the collaboration of Paul Wayland Bartlett, carved by the Piccirilli Brothers, representing Integrity Protecting the Works of Man. The building was listed as a National Historic Landmark and added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 2, 1978.[13] In 1922, a building for offices, designed by Trowbridge & Livingston, was added at 11 Wall Street, as well as a new trading floor called the Garage. Additional trading floor space was added in 1969 the Blue Room, and in 1988 the EBR or Extended Blue Room, with the latest technology for information display and communication. Yet another trading floor was opened at 30 Broad Street called the Bond Room in 2000. As the NYSE introduced its hybrid market, a greater proportion of trading came to be executed electronically, and due to the resulting reduction in demand for trading floor space, the NYSE decided to close the 30 Broad Street trading room in early 2006. As the adoption of electronic trading continued to reduce the number of traders and employees on the floor, in late 2007, the NYSE closed the rooms created by the 1969 and 1988 expansions. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NYSE Image By Kowloonese (08:27, 30 May 2004) (Own work) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons- published: 29 Mar 2014
- views: 87
10:45
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Stock Market: "Working Dollars" 1957 New York Stock Exchange 11min
more at http://money.quickfound.net/ "Animated explanation of how the stock market works, ...
published: 22 Jan 2012
author: Jeff Quitney
Stock Market: "Working Dollars" 1957 New York Stock Exchange 11min
Stock Market: "Working Dollars" 1957 New York Stock Exchange 11min
more at http://money.quickfound.net/ "Animated explanation of how the stock market works, told through the story of an Everyman named Mr. Finchley." Public d...- published: 22 Jan 2012
- views: 1306
- author: Jeff Quitney
1:02
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Inside Bombay Stock Exchange - BSE
BSE Bombay Stock Exchange, Dalal Street, Bombay. This is where ALL the action takes place ...
published: 23 Sep 2011
author: WildFilmsIndia
Inside Bombay Stock Exchange - BSE
Inside Bombay Stock Exchange - BSE
BSE Bombay Stock Exchange, Dalal Street, Bombay. This is where ALL the action takes place in Mumbai! Even after the city's name was changed to Mumbai, they h...- published: 23 Sep 2011
- views: 12941
- author: WildFilmsIndia
4:12
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Proof That Birth Certificates Are Traded On NYSE Stock Exchange
How Much Is Yours Worth? Garko finds out that a military industrial complex company owns h...
published: 22 Aug 2011
author: FederalJacktube6
Proof That Birth Certificates Are Traded On NYSE Stock Exchange
Proof That Birth Certificates Are Traded On NYSE Stock Exchange
How Much Is Yours Worth? Garko finds out that a military industrial complex company owns his birth certificate which is worth $1000000 by calling a stock bro...- published: 22 Aug 2011
- views: 29588
- author: FederalJacktube6
3:39
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The Dark Knight Rises - Bane Hits the Stock Exchange (HD) IMAX
Bane hits the stock exchange to steal Bruce Wayne's money. All material owned by Warner Br...
published: 17 Nov 2012
author: JokerDonny
The Dark Knight Rises - Bane Hits the Stock Exchange (HD) IMAX
The Dark Knight Rises - Bane Hits the Stock Exchange (HD) IMAX
Bane hits the stock exchange to steal Bruce Wayne's money. All material owned by Warner Bros. For entertainment purposes only. Buy the movie on Blu-ray.- published: 17 Nov 2012
- views: 408497
- author: JokerDonny
1:12
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Tense trading at NY Stock Exchange
Trading was volatile on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange, as a better-than-expected U...
published: 05 Aug 2011
author: AFP
Tense trading at NY Stock Exchange
Tense trading at NY Stock Exchange
Trading was volatile on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange, as a better-than-expected US jobs report and hints of progress in Europe's debt crisis gave so...- published: 05 Aug 2011
- views: 3210
- author: AFP
Youtube results:
13:02
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How the New York Stock Exchange Works: Brokers and Bidders - Making Money (1958)
The exchange was closed shortly after the beginning of World War I (July 31, 1914), but it...
published: 02 Apr 2014
How the New York Stock Exchange Works: Brokers and Bidders - Making Money (1958)
How the New York Stock Exchange Works: Brokers and Bidders - Making Money (1958)
The exchange was closed shortly after the beginning of World War I (July 31, 1914), but it partially re-opened on November 28 of that year in order to help the war effort by trading bonds, and completely reopened for stock trading in mid-December. On September 16, 1920, a bomb exploded on Wall Street outside the NYSE building, killing 33 people and injuring more than 400. The perpetrators were never found. The NYSE building and some buildings nearby, such as the JP Morgan building, still have marks on their façades caused by the bombing. The Black Thursday crash of the Exchange on October 24, 1929, and the sell-off panic which started on Black Tuesday, October 29, are often blamed for precipitating the Great Depression. In an effort to try to restore investor confidence, the Exchange unveiled a fifteen-point program aimed to upgrade protection for the investing public on October 31, 1938. On October 1, 1934, the exchange was registered as a national securities exchange with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, with a president and a thirty-three member board. On February 18, 1971 the non-profit corporation was formed, and the number of board members was reduced to twenty-five. One of Abbie Hoffman's well-known publicity stunts took place in 1967, when he led members of the Yippie movement to the Exchange's gallery. The provocateurs hurled fistfuls of real dollars mixed with fake dollars toward the trading floor below. Some traders booed, and some collected the apparent bounty. The press was quick to respond and, by evening, the event had been reported around the world.[citation needed] (The stock exchange later spent $20,000 to enclose the gallery with bulletproof glass.) Hoffman wrote a decade later, "We didn't call the press; at that time we really had no notion of anything called a media event". On October 19, 1987, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) dropped 508 points, a 22.6% loss in a single day, the second-biggest one-day drop the exchange had experienced, prompting officials at the exchange to invoke for the first time the "circuit breaker" rule to halt all trading. This was a very controversial move and led to a quick change in the rule; trading now halts for an hour, two hours, or the rest of the day when the DJIA drops 10, 20, or 30 percent, respectively. The rationale behind the trading halt was to give investors a chance to cool off and reevaluate their positions. Black Monday was followed by Terrible Tuesday, a day in which the Exchange's systems did not perform well and some people had difficulty completing their trades. Subsequently, there was another major drop for the Dow on October 13, 1989; the Mini-Crash of 1989. The crash was apparently caused by a reaction to a news story of a $6.75 billion leveraged buyout deal for UAL Corporation, the parent company of United Airlines, which broke down. When the UAL deal fell through, it helped trigger the collapse of the junk bond market causing the Dow to fall 190.58 points, or 6.91 percent. Similarly, there was a panic in the financial world during the year of 1997; the Asian Financial Crisis. Like the fall of many foreign markets, the Dow suffered a 7.18% drop in value (554.26 points) on October 27, 1997, in what later became known as the 1997 Mini-Crash but from which the DJIA recovered quickly. On January 26, 2000, an altercation during filming of the music video for "Sleep Now in the Fire", which was directed by Michael Moore, caused the doors of the exchange to be closed and the band Rage Against the Machine to be escorted from the site by security[17] after band members attempted to gain entry into the exchange.[18] Trading on the exchange floor, however, continued uninterrupted.[19] In the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, the NYSE was closed for 4 trading sessions, one of the longest times the NYSE was closed for more than one session; only the third time since March 1933. On May 6, 2010, the Dow Jones Industrial Average posted its largest intraday percentage drop since the October 19, 1987 crash, with a 998 point loss later being called the 2010 Flash Crash (as the drop occurred in minutes before rebounding). The SEC and CFTC published a report on the event, although it did not come to a conclusion as to the cause. The regulators found no evidence that the fall was caused by erroneous ("fat finger") orders.[20] On October 29, 2012, the stock exchange was shut down for 2 days due to Hurricane Sandy.[21] The last time the stock exchange was closed due to weather for a full two days was on March 12 and 13 in 1888. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Stock_Exchange- published: 02 Apr 2014
- views: 1
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Stock Market: "What Makes Us Tick" 1952 New York Stock Exchange 12min
more at http://money.quickfound.net/ "Cartoon promoting the stock market as the engine of ...
published: 13 Feb 2012
author: Jeff Quitney
Stock Market: "What Makes Us Tick" 1952 New York Stock Exchange 12min
Stock Market: "What Makes Us Tick" 1952 New York Stock Exchange 12min
more at http://money.quickfound.net/ "Cartoon promoting the stock market as the engine of America's prosperity." Public domain film from the Library of Congr...- published: 13 Feb 2012
- views: 3055
- author: Jeff Quitney
1:47
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What is a stock exchange?
With all the scrutiny that comes with being a publicly traded company, why would companies...
published: 05 Apr 2013
author: FinLitTVStudios
What is a stock exchange?
What is a stock exchange?
With all the scrutiny that comes with being a publicly traded company, why would companies want to be listed and what is the benefit to the public? After all...- published: 05 Apr 2013
- views: 86
- author: FinLitTVStudios
4:22
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London Stock Exchange
Christie is proud to announce the largest and one of the most prestigious installations of...
published: 26 Aug 2013
London Stock Exchange
London Stock Exchange
Christie is proud to announce the largest and one of the most prestigious installations of Christie MicroTiles™ to date in EMEA, at the London Stock Exchange in Paternoster Square, London. The installation will be utilised in the Exchanges new Market Open Ceremony. The installation of 508 Christie MicroTiles™ at the London Stock Exchange follows a recommendation for their use by CMS Consultant Jerry Collins and a subsequent tender won by long-standing Christie Partner, Focus 21 Visual Communications Ltd. The new Market Open Ceremony provides companies joining London Stock Exchange markets with the opportunity to mark the occasion using the most advanced display technology and bespoke visual communication. The Christie MicroTiles installation replaces The Source, a moving sculpture previously installed in the Atrium. Visitors to Paternoster Square are now welcomed by columns of Christie MicroTiles in a 1 x 5 configuration. Then as they enter the Atrium their view is directed to either side by two strips of MicroTiles, each consisting of 29 and 31 MicroTiles respectively, and on to an impressive video wall that uses 132 MicroTiles in an 11 x 12 array. The video wall, in unison with the other MicroTiles arrays stream a variety of content throughout the day including live news and market updates from CNBC. For more information on Christie MicroTiles, please visit: microtiles.com- published: 26 Aug 2013
- views: 32