The hours that the stock markets are open probably seem odd to
many people working in more conventional establishments. Of course it’s
not as simple as it looks. Whilst the doors to the outside street may
be closed, there’s still a million and one things going on inside the
building - 9.30pm to 5.15pm really would be too good to be true.
The opening and closing times were pretty vague when the stock
exchanges were first established and the times of the “bells” came
about by little better than trial and error - eventually a sort of
optimum was reached. With a few minor adjustments, they stayed the same
until the dying days of the twentieth century but of course, times have
changed and many of the parameters which were important a hundred years
ago have either lost their relevance or they’re just not there at all
now. Once, it was of major importance that the news of the day’s
trading got to the offices of the Newspapers in time for the copy to be
prepared and the platens to be made in time to get the finished
publications onto the newsstands early in the morning. Now that’s all
done electronically and digitally - no runners, no paper and no
platens! In any case, how many investors these days get their
information from newspapers when the internet is so much more
convenient and immediate?
We live now in what’s usually called a “24/7” world. With business
being fully spread round the planet and with the different cultures
around the globe, there’s something somewhere, open all the time. The
New York stock exchange - Wall Street - is closed July 4th. That’s
about the most important day of the year to Americans but London,
Frankfurt, Paris, Hong Kong etc. don’t celebrate Independence Day so
their stock exchanges trade as usual. In France, the big day is a few
days later, July 14th, quartorze juillet - the French language doesn’t
require capital letters for dates. That commemorates the Storming of
the Bastille in 1789 which began the French Revolution, just as
formative a day in world History as July 4th 1776. Needless to say, the
Paris “Bourse” is closed that day but the rest of the world carries on
as usual. Life as a whole now is 24/7 and with globalization, no
economy is isolated from what goes on elsewhere. With the globalization
of manufacturing, has come globalization of information, mainly as a
result of the explosion of digital communications technology.
It’s not just important, it’s vital that the Dell sales center in Texas
is in constant touch with the company’s manufacturing facilities in
Malaysia and Singapore - equally, it’s vital that stock holders of
businesses based in Hong Kong can track events back here in New York -
or Chicago - or wherever they happen to live. The hours that the doors
of the stock markets around the world are physically open tend to
reflect the needs and customs of the countries concerned. That’s not to
say that the markets are really closed. So much trading is done
electronically that it’s truer to say that, like the Windmill Theater
in London during the dark days of World War two said “We Never
Closed”.
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