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The stock exchange is often pictured as a chaotic room full of people shouting and waving paper—a high-stakes "auction house" for the world's most powerful companies. While today’s markets are mostly silent rows of servers in data centers, their origin story is far more "boots-on-the-ground". The "Buttonwood" Beginning
Before this, the "first" official stock exchange was born in 1602 Amsterdam. It was created specifically to fund the , allowing everyday people to buy "shares" in dangerous sea voyages to trade spices. This was the first time the risk of a massive venture was split among thousands of small investors rather than one wealthy king. How the "Machine" Works At its core, a stock exchange is just a marketplace . How the Stock Market Works: A Beginner’s Guide | Chase stock exchange
The world’s most famous exchange, the , didn't start in a skyscraper. On May 17, 1792, 24 brokers gathered under a Buttonwood tree on Wall Street to sign a simple two-sentence agreement. They pledged to trade only with each other and at fixed commission rates, essentially creating a private club that became the heart of global finance. The stock exchange is often pictured as a
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