Wiener Börse

The Wiener Börse AG (also known as the Vienna Stock Exchange) is a bourse situated in Vienna, Austria. The exchange also owns and operates the Prague Stock Exchange, and holds stakes in energy exchanges and clearing houses. It provides market infrastructure to other exchanges in Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe (Budapest, Zagreb, and Ljubljana), and collects and distributes stock market data and calculates the most important indices of the region. The Austrian Traded Index (ATX), the leading index of Wiener Börse, tracks the price of its blue chips in real time. The ATX composition is updated every March and September, mainly based on a stock's capitalized free float and trading volumes.[1]

Wiener Börse AG
TypeStock exchange
LocationVienna, Austria
Coordinates48°12′54″N 16°22′00″E
Founded1771 (1771)
Key peopleChristoph Boschan, Andrea Herrmann, Petr Koblic
IndicesAustrian Traded Index (ATX)
Websitewww.wienerboerse.at
Palais Caprara-Geymüller, site of the Wiener Börse

History

Wiener Börse is one of the world's oldest exchanges and was founded in 1771 during the reign of Empress Maria Theresa of Austria in order to provide a market for state issued bonds. She tried to rein in the illegal trade that took place in coffeeshops during that time.[2]

On 9 May 1873, the stock exchange crashed spectacularly ("Der Krach"), signalling the start of the Long Depression.[3]

In 1985, Jim Rogers triggered a bull market when he said the Austrian capital market had high potential.

In 2019, it opened a multilateral trading facility (the exchange-regulated "Vienna MTF"), a Third market for over-the-counter transactions, mainly of foreign corporate bonds.[4]

In 2020, the Vienna Stock Exchange decided to simplify its group structure. In order to reduce expenses and costs, Wiener Börse AG merged with the former group holding company CEESEG AG. The Prague Stock Exchange is now a 99.54% subsidiary of Wiener Börse AG.

On 1 September 2020, the Wiener Börse listed its first 21 titles denominated in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum, including the services of real-time quotation and securities settlement.[5]

See also

References

  1. "Wiener Börse Konzernstruktur". Wiener Börse AG (in German). Retrieved 26 June 2022.
  2. "250 Jahre Wiener Börse - ein Vierteljahrtausend Kapitalismus".
  3. Pieter M. Judson (1996). Exclusive Revolutionaries: Liberal Politics, Social Experience, and National Identity in the Austrian Empire, 1848-1914. University of Michigan Press. p. 166. ISBN 9780472107407.
  4. "Fact Sheet - Third Market (MTF) of the Wiener Börse" (PDF). wienerborse.at. p. 4. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 May 2020.
  5. "21Shares brings first crypto-currency products on Bitcoin and Ethereum to the official market". 1 September 2020. Archived from the original on 3 September 2020.
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