Jack o'Clubs
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20 years ago today: the Big Bang. Some great quotes in today's papers about how things used to be:
"Terry Smith, the chief executive of the stockbroker Collins Stewart, was running the financial desk of BZW in 1986. 'If you wanted to trade before Big Bang," he said, "you had to pick up a radio telephone like the ones aeroplane pilots use today and call the Stock Exchange.
'You'd get a pause of about 10 minutes while they went around jobbers and came back with a quote. You'd ring the client to get authority for a trade, then ring the broker again to agree the price. This whole palaver took ages.'
David Mayhew, who was working in sales at Cazenove & Co in 1986 and now chairs JP Morgan Cazenove, added 'In foreign exchange and the gilts market, after Big Bang we had 28 market-makers, compared to four beforehand. There was an opening up to competition.'
The average daily number of equity trades on the London Stock Exchange has grown from 20,000 in 1986 to 313,000 on the SETS (LSE's electronic order book trading service for UK blue chips) order book nowadays, while the average daily value traded has mushroomed from £700m to £5.8bn. Last year, there were 30m trades that didn't go through SETS, in addition to the 51m that did."
"Terry Smith, the chief executive of the stockbroker Collins Stewart, was running the financial desk of BZW in 1986. 'If you wanted to trade before Big Bang," he said, "you had to pick up a radio telephone like the ones aeroplane pilots use today and call the Stock Exchange.
'You'd get a pause of about 10 minutes while they went around jobbers and came back with a quote. You'd ring the client to get authority for a trade, then ring the broker again to agree the price. This whole palaver took ages.'
David Mayhew, who was working in sales at Cazenove & Co in 1986 and now chairs JP Morgan Cazenove, added 'In foreign exchange and the gilts market, after Big Bang we had 28 market-makers, compared to four beforehand. There was an opening up to competition.'
The average daily number of equity trades on the London Stock Exchange has grown from 20,000 in 1986 to 313,000 on the SETS (LSE's electronic order book trading service for UK blue chips) order book nowadays, while the average daily value traded has mushroomed from £700m to £5.8bn. Last year, there were 30m trades that didn't go through SETS, in addition to the 51m that did."