What is a stock exchange?
Since stocks are one of the most popular trading instruments among retail and institutional investors alike, understanding what stock exchanges are can take your trading experience to a whole new level.
Stock exchanges are marketplaces where traders can buy and sell stocks, bonds, commodities, and other assets. Unlike over-the-counter markets, stock exchanges act as intermediaries between investors and companies whose stocks are traded on exchanges.
In the past, all stock exchanges were physical spaces, but today, most modern exchanges operate online as electronic trading platforms. The most well-known among these are the NASDAQ, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), the London Stock Exchange (LSE), the Tokyo Stock Exchange (JPX), and several others. Although there are still exchanges with physical trading floors, the global trend overwhelmingly favors electronic trading and digital platforms.
How stock exchanges work
Stock exchanges allow traders and investors to buy or sell securities of well-known companies.
However, before they can do this, the stocks they want to buy must first be introduced to the general public. For this to happen, companies conduct their initial public offerings (IPOs). That’s when a company issues shares for the public to purchase for the first time. The IPO is what essentially transforms the company from a privately owned one to a publicly traded one. IPOs allow companies to raise capital to pay off debt, fund new developments, boost brand recognition, and so on.
After the IPO, new shareholders can sell their shares to other members of the general public through the secondary market, including stock exchanges. That’s where the actual trading occurs. The price of shares changes depending on their supply and demand levels, so the value of the stocks will go up if the public is interested in owning a share in a company.