Financial Times FT.com

Exchanges and banks step on each other’s turf

By Norma Cohen

Published: July 25 2007 19:37 | Last updated: July 25 2007 19:37

When the Buttonwood Agreement that laid the foundations of the New York Stock Exchange was signed in 1817, it had just two provisions: that brokers dealt only with each other and that no one undercut the others on commission.

Indeed, the founders were simply formalising what had been at the core of exchanges since they were first formed in medieval times. In effect they were clubs of middlemen who matched buyers and sellers and tried to keep competitors away.

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