The Stock Exchanges There are thousands of stocks, but shares of the largest, best-known, and most actively
traded corporations generally are listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE). The exchange dates its origin back
to 1792, when a group of stockbrokers gathered under a buttonwood tree on Wall Street in New York City to make some
rules to govern stock buying and selling. By the late 1990s, the NYSE listed some 3,600 different stocks. The
exchange has 1,366 members, or "seats," which are bought by brokerage houses at hefty prices and are used for
buying and selling stocks for the public. Information travels electronically between brokerage offices and the
exchange, which requires 200 miles (320 kilometers) of fiber-optic cable and 8,000 phone connections to handle
quotes and orders.
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