How the NYSE Works

The New York Stock Exchange uses two methods of trading: brokers and all-electronic. Regardless of the method of exchange, all stock transactions are an auction. Brokers actively trade stocks on the floor of the NYSE. Buyers and sellers auction securities for the highest price. Brokers represent the entity buying the stock, whether it’s for a retail brokerage company or institutional investors such as pension funds. The brokers set the “bid” price, which is the price you’re willing to pay for the stock. When your stockbroker executes your order to sell, it is not completed until one of the dealers on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange finds another broker to buy it. Before trading, brokers and dealers must get approved by the NYSE and hold a trading license. The dealers match up the brokers with the stock sellers, who submit an “ask” price. It’s usually higher than the bid price. In this way, it’s like selling a home. The dealer is like the real estate agent, who puts the buyer and seller together. Dealers get to pocket the difference between the ask and bid price, minus fees and expenses, for their work. Most of the transactions occur electronically. A computer acts as the dealer, matching up buyers and sellers. Even the brokers and dealers get their information and trade electronically. 

NYSE Hours of Operation

The opening bell of the NYSE rings at 9:30 a.m. Eastern, while the closing bell rings at 4 p.m. Eastern. This tradition began in 1870 with a Chinese gong. In 1903, when the NYSE moved to its current location, it switched to brass bells. The NYSE uses the opening and closing bells to celebrate a New York City or financially-related event. It’s considered an honor to be invited to ring it. For example, if a company has just issued an Initial Public Offering with the NYSE, that firm’s CEO or President of the Board gets to ring the NYSE bell.

History of the NYSE

The NYSE began on May 17, 1792, under a buttonwood tree at 68 Wall Street. Twenty-four brokers and merchants signed the aptly-named Buttonwood Agreement to outline the rules for trading securities. The first stock listed on this exchange was the Bank of New York. The founders named their organization the New York Stock & Exchange Board, which they shortened to the New York Stock Exchange in 1863. There were only 1,366 traders. They were all men until 1967 when Muriel Siebert became the first woman who was allowed to trade. The NYSE became a not-for-profit corporation in 1971 and a publicly traded company in April 2006. That was the same time that it moved to an electronic system used by traders and the public alike. In 2007, the NYSE merged with Euronext. It now has the capacity to trade up to 10 billion shares per day. The move combined the NYSE with the five major European exchanges, including the Paris Bourse, Amsterdam, the London International Financial Futures Exchange, Brussels, and Lisbon. In 2008, the NYSE acquired the American Stock Exchange, focusing on small cap companies. The NYSE Euronext also operates three other exchanges: