The Future of Investing



What is the Stock Market?

The Australian Stock Exchange

So what is the stock market and what are shares?

The stock market is where the buying and selling of company shares takes place. In Australia, these transactions take place through the Australian Stock Exchange, or ASX as it is known. It was formed in 1987 by amalgamating the six capital city stock exchanges. The amalgamation was necessary because of financial deregulation and the accompanying increase in international transactions.

Before 1987, most of the action took place on the floor of the stock exchanges. Transactions were shouted, prices were chalked up on a board, in fact, to most of us, it seemed as if there was little order to the goings-on. However, the ASX introduced the Stock Exchange Automated Trading System (SEATS), which by 1990 had taken over all transactions. SEATS allows trading to be conducted through a computer system. Transactions are processed in the order in which they are made and the system links buyers and sellers. It may not match the drama of the past but it is far more efficient.


S&P/ASX 200 Composite Index

The state of the stock market is judged by the S&P/ASX 200 Composite Index, which recently replaced the All Ordinaries Index, formerly known as the All Ords.

The S&P/ASX 200 Composite Index is a measure of 200 of the largest and most frequently traded stocks on the Australian share market. Measuring their rise and fall allows us to have a fairly accurate reading of how the Australian market as a whole is faring. The American equivalent of the S&P/ASX 200 Composite Index is the Dow Jones Index. Each major share market around the world has its own index to help investors rate how the market is faring, plus a number of sub indices such as an industrial index, a gold index or a resources index, that measure particular sectors.

Next: What are Shares?

  

  

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