Bucharest Stock Exchange
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bucharest Stock Exchange | |
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Bursa de Valori Bucureşti | |
Type | Stock Exchange |
Location | Bucharest, Romania |
Founded | 1 December 1882 (closed in 1945 by the communists re-opened in 21 April 1995) |
Key people | Stere Farmache (President and General Director) |
Currency | RON |
MarketCap | 55 bn $ 9 bn$ (Rasdaq) |
Indexes | BET 10 BET-C BET-FI ROTX |
Website | www.bvb.ro |
The Bucharest Stock Exchange (Bursa de Valori Bucureşti in Romanian) is a stock exchange in Bucharest, capital of Romania. On December 1, 2005, Bucharest's electronic over-the-counter stock market, Rasdaq, was merged with the Bucharest Stock Exchange.
The total capitalisation of the Bucharest Stock Exchange is around 55 bn $ and the capitalisation of Rasdaq is around 9 bn$.
Contents |
[edit] History
[edit] Pre-World War II
The Bucharest Exchange opened on 1 December 1882 in the building of the Chamber of Commerce in Bucharest. It was regulated by the "Law on exchanges, securities and commodities brokers" ("Legea asupra Burselor, Mijlocitorilor de Schimb şi Mijlocitorilor de Mărfuri") passed one year earlier. There were 21 securities quoted (6 stocks and 15 commercial paper issues) and it was also used for trading commodities. In 1904 a new "Law on commercial exchanges" ("Legea asupra burselor de comerţ") was passed. Among other things, the new law separated securities trading from commodities trading and introduced a Clearing house, which improved investor confidence. The number of quoted securities also increased to 43 (21 stocks and 22 commercial papers).
Market activity was relatively low until 1916 when, due to Romania's entering World War I, trading was suspended altogether. The exchange was reopened after the war and trading and market capitalization increased rapidly based on the setting of many new companies and strong investor demand for securities. Strong growth was driven first by transportation and banking stocks and, after 1925, by speculation with oil companies' stocks (oil stocks accounted for over 75% of market turnover).
After an extended period of strong growth, stock prices fell sharply with the start of the 1929 Great Depression, reaching their lowest historical level in 1932. Beginning with 1933, the exchange started to recover, with prices and trading volume reaching the highest level in interbellum history in 1939. The exchange continued trading through World War II and market turnover even increased. In 1945, after the communist regime seized power, the Bucharest Exchange, as a capitalist institution, was closed and securities trading disappeared for the following 50 years.
[edit] Post-Communist
Economy of Romania | |
Main Sectors | |
Finances | |
Romanian leu |
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Other | |
Companies |
After the Romanian Revolution of 1989, the exchange became necessary again. The Bucharest Stock Exchange was reopened on 21 April 1995 in the building of the National Bank of Romania. The exchange started trading in November, with only 9 quoted stocks and weekly trading sessions. In the first year, there was scarcely any activity. Trading started to increase in 1997, when the number of quoted stocks increased to 76, and volume and prices increased rapidly in the first half of the year. However, this rapid growth was followed in the second half of the year by a strong bear market, due to some contagion effect from the East Asian financial crisis as well as to domestic problems. The newly introduced BET index fell 24% in the last three months of 1997 and a further 50% in 1998.
In 1998 listed stocks were separated in two tiers, the exchange introduced daily trading and the National Bank of Romania became the settlement bank. In trying to improve investor confidence, in 1999 the exchange delisted many companies which had various problems, although it allowed their stocks to continue to be traded using its mechanisms. However, market evolution was mixed until 2001.
The exchange turned to a bull market in 2001, strong growth in capitalisation, trading volume and stock prices lasting up to the present. In the next years, stock prices soared, registering record increases. In 2002, BET index increased by 117.5% and, according to Financial Times, BSE has grown fastest among world exchanges that year.
New instruments were introduced by a management of Vienna Stock Exchange in 2001 with a new listing structure and listing of the first municipal bonds. However, Bond trading has been very thin until now, partly because of repeated postponing of the listing of government bonds.
On 14 February 2008, the first foreign company is listed: Erste Bank der oesterreichischen Sparkassen AG (Erste Bank) having the symbol EBS.
[edit] Indices
Bucharest Stock Exchange has four indices:
- BET, which was created first, reflects the evolution of the most liquid 10 stocks (except Investment Funds); it is the most followed index of the exchange
- BET-C (BET Composite) reflects the evolution of all listed stocks (except Investment Funds)
- BET-FI reflects the evolution of the five large Investment Funds created in the Mass Privatisation Program
- ROTX (Romanian Traded Index) reflects the evolution of the most liquid blue chips
[edit] Largest Stocks by Market Value
Source:http://www.bvb.ro/, in millions of $ in April 2008
- Erste Bank - US$ 21.636
- Petrom - US$ 11.279
- BRD-Societe Generale - US$ 6.414
- Alro Slatina - US$ 2.242
- Banca Transilvania - US$ 1.920
- Transgaz - US$ 1.126
- Transelectrica - US$ 811
- SIF 3 Transylvania - US$ 710
- SIF 5 Oltenia - US$ 709
- SIF 1 Banat-Crisana - US$ 617
- SIF 4 Muntenia - US$ 561
- Rompetrol Rafinare - US$ 560
- SIF 2 Moldova - US$ 512
- Antibiotice Iaşi - US$ 294
- Impact Bucureşti - US$ 197
- Banca Comerciala Carpatica - US$ 182
- Mechel Targoviste - US$ 172
- TMK-Artrom Slatina - US$ 146
- Turism Felix - US$ 141
- Biofarm - US$ 134
[edit] References
- Anghelache, Gabriela, "Bursa şi piaţa extrabursieră", Editura Economică, 2000
- BSE Annual Reports