A stock exchange,
share market
or bourse is a
corporation or
mutual organization which provides
facilities for
stock brokers and
traders, to trade company
stocks and other
securities. Stock exchanges also provide
facilities for the issue and redemption of
securities, as well as, other financial
instruments and capital events including the
payment of income and
dividends. The securities traded on a stock
exchange include:
shares issued by companies,
unit trusts and other pooled investment
products and
bonds. To be able to trade a security on a
certain stock exchange, it has to be listed
there. Usually there is a central location at
least for recordkeeping, but trade is less and
less linked to such a physical place, as modern
markets are
electronic networks, which gives them
advantages of speed and cost of transactions.
Trade on an exchange is by members only. The
initial offering of stocks and bonds to
investors is by definition done in the
primary market and subsequent trading is
done in the
secondary market. A stock exchange is often
the most important component of a
stock market. Supply and demand in stock
markets is driven by various factors which, as
in all
free markets, affect the price of stocks (see
stock valuation).
There is usually no compulsion to issue stock
via the stock exchange itself, nor must stock be
subsequently traded on the exchange. Such
trading is said to be off exchange or
over-the-counter. This is the usual way that
bonds are traded. Increasingly, stock
exchanges are part of a global market for
securities.