The money network:

The money network:

Why crowdfunding threatens traditional bank lending

The truth about Asian investment banking

September 1997

London Stock Exchange: The Big Fizzle?



Next month marks the biggest change to London's stock market since Big Bang of 1986. On October 20 the London Stock Exchange (LSE) will replace its current quote-driven system of market-makers with an electronic order book - initially for the market's top 100 shares and later, perhaps, for the whole market. This innovation, accompanied by a number of other changes to trading practices and regulations, will have a major impact on both the liquidity and transparency of the stock market, But it may, inadvertently, erode the LSE's virtual monopoly on securities trading in the UK.

This technological revolution brings the LSE into line with stock exchanges in Europe and America, where order-driven systems predominate. Under the new system, orders to buy or sell shares in FTSE 100 securities will be entered on an electronic system - the Stock Exchange Electronic Trading Service (SETS) - and executed when they match. With the...


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