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Finance: What are the NASDAQ and NYSE? 74 Views


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Description:

What are NASDAQ and the NYSE? NYSE stands for New York Stock Exchange, and NASDAQ is more or less a component of this. The stock exchange is where investors can buy and sell securities. NASDAQ, specifically, is an index that serves as the benchmark for tech stocks like Google and Apple.

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English Language

Transcript

00:00

Finance a la Shmoop. What are the NASDAQ and the NYSE? Nasdaq, yeah it stands for

00:09

National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotation-systems. And [NASDAQ defined]

00:13

yeah, it feels like they got cheated out of an S in there somewhere, like NASDAQ'S.

00:17

That's what happens when life's on a budget. So NASDAQ is an electronic

00:22

version of the original wall, as in Street, Wall Street, yah that. Where

00:26

well-dressed folks would come with cash in hand scream out a stock and a price [stock market in 1900s]

00:30

and then trade shares. They would trade for whatever was trending at the time. Like

00:34

eyeball massagers, or wooden swimsuits, or motorised surfboards, all real things

00:39

by the way. NASDAQ is the much more modern version of its predecessor NYSE.

00:48

Is anything but nice when you lose money there. NYSE stands for New York

00:50

Stock Exchange and it too was an outgrowth of the well-dressed folks at

00:54

the wall. There are two key structural differences in the two trading systems,

00:57

the NYSE is an actual physical place, has a physical location, address, etc. and this [NYSE Building]

01:04

is what it looks like. NASDAQ is really a concept, a religion, a

01:09

network, it's not really a place. At least not a geographic place. The other big

01:14

difference is the manner in which shares are traded. The NYSE is an auction-based

01:18

system, one individual is a buyer of AMZN at $983.25, he screams electronically

01:24

that number and then buys from whoever is willing to sell at that price.

01:27

Individuals buy from individuals. That's an auction market. But NASDAQ is a

01:32

dealer market, that is somebody deals in the stock. They go out into the market[online stock market]

01:38

and buy say a million shares of whatever.com that was bought in the market

01:41

conveniently for exactly ten bucks even. That dealer now makes a market in that

01:46

stock, ie the dealer is kind of you know, their own individual market. And she

01:50

moves with the market to manage the spread in the trades. Like she might have

01:54

a narrow spread, where she's a buyer of the stock at $10.02 and a seller of the

01:59

stock at $10.07 a share. Or it's a really wild volatile stock, on a wild and [man and woman on rollercoaster]

02:04

volatile day, she might be a buyer only at $9.90 and a seller at $10.30, making 40

02:09

cents a share trade. Well you could do the fancy math that if she

02:13

keeps her inventory steady at a million shares and trades a million shares that

02:17

day. Well with that spread she makes 40 cents times a million or 400 grand for

02:21

the day's efforts. However after staring at a screen all day she's gonna have to

02:24

spend at least some of that money on eye care. [woman in office]

02:26

Thank goodness for those eyeball massagers.

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