Regulation of the London Stock Exchange

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A01=Chris Swinson
Author_Chris Swinson
Bodkin Committee
Bodkin Committee archives
Capital Issues Committee
Category=KCZ
Category=KFFM
Clarence Hatry
De Verteuil
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Financial Crisis
Financial regulation
financial regulation history
Fixed Trust
Fortnightly Settlement
Greene Committee
Greene Committee Report
interwar economic policy
Investment Trust Shares
Jacob Factor
Jute Industries
Liberal Industrial Inquiry
Local Authority Loans
London Brokers
Lord Kylsant
market abuse prevention
Processing Stock Transfers
Provincial Brokers
Provincial Stock Exchanges
Recognised Stock Exchanges
Royal Mail Steam Packet Company
securities market governance
Share Pusher
South African War Memorial
statutory regulation evolution UK
statutory regulation of share trading
The City of London
The London Stock Exchange
Trade's Reaction
Trade’s Reaction
UK financial crime
UK Government Security
UK Insurer
UK Subsidiary

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138040212
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In 1914, the notion of statutory regulation of trading in shares was anathema to both the Government and the London Stock Exchange. By 1945, a statutory scheme of regulation had been introduced. This book serves to:

  • Track the steps by which this outcome came about,
  • Explain why the Exchange felt obliged in the process to abandon long-cherished policies,
  • Analyse the forces which led to it, and
  • Account for the form in which it was implemented.

Throughout the period, the attitudes of both the Stock Exchange and Government were affected by widening interest in share ownership, the increasing tendency for business interests to look to the Exchange for long-term finance, and the increasing challenge of financing the Government’s expenditure. At a disaggregated level, the market was able to respond to changing circumstances taking advantages of opportunities and weaknesses. At an aggregated level, the Exchange was not able to foresee the implications of change or to forestall unfortunate consequences. This exposed the weakness of the criminal justice system and its failure to serve as a deterrent for abuse.

This study, the only book to take full account of the documents held by the National Archives in relation to the Bodkin Committee, examines the stages by which share trading in the United Kingdom came to be a statutorily regulated activity and by which the London Stock Exchange moved from being antagonistic towards public regulation in 1914 to lobbying in 1944 for the new scheme to be implemented.

Chris Swinson is one of the country's leading experts on corporate accountancy and auditing, acting as an expert witness in litigation concerning auditing negligence, usually in the respect of fraud.

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