Euronext Paris

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Euronext Paris, formerly known as the Paris Bourse, is the official stock exchange in France. It is Europe's second largest stock exchange as of December 2023.[2][3] It was formerly seated at the Palais Brongniart in Paris, its long-standing home. As of 2022, the 795 companies listed had a combined market capitalization of over US$4.58 trillion.[1]

Euronext Paris
TypeStock exchange
LocationParis, France
Coordinates48°52′07.42″N 02°19′37.81″E / 48.8687278°N 2.3271694°E / 48.8687278; 2.3271694
Founded24 September 1724; 300 years ago (1724-09-24) (as Paris Bourse)
22 September 2000; 24 years ago (2000-09-22) (as Euronext Paris)
OwnerEuronext
Key peopleDelphine d'Amarzit (CEO)
CurrencyEUR
No. of listings795[1]
Market capUS$4.58 trillion[1]
IndicesCAC 40
CAC Next 20
CAC Mid 60
CAC Small
Websitewww.euronext.com/en/markets/paris

In September 2000, the Paris Bourse joined the Amsterdam, Lisbon and Brussels stock exchanges to form Euronext. It was subsequently rebranded Euronext Paris.

History

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Palais Brongniart in 1900
 
Building at 4, place de la Bourse (center right), former seat of the Compagnie des agents de change until 1988
 
Interior of the headquarters of SBF, then Euronext at 39–41, rue Cambon, in 2014

In the early 19th century, the Paris Bourse's activities found a stable location at the Palais Brongniart, or Palais de la Bourse, built to the designs of architect Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart from 1808 to 1813 and completed by Éloi Labarre from 1813 to 1826.[4] Brongniart had spontaneously submitted his project, which was a rectangular neoclassical Roman temple with a giant Corinthian colonnade enclosing a vaulted and arcaded central chamber. His designs were greatly admired by Napoleon and won Brongniart a major public commission at the end of his career. Initially praised, the building was later attacked for academic dullness. The authorities had required Brongniart to modify his designs, and after Brongniart's death in 1813, Labarre altered them even further, greatly weakening Brongniart's original intentions. From 1901 to 1905, Jean-Baptiste-Frederic Cavel designed the addition of two lateral wings, resulting in a cruciform plan with innumerable columns. According to the architectural historian Andrew Ayers, these alterations "did nothing to improve the reputation of this uninspiring monument."[4]

From the second half of the 19th century, official stock markets in Paris were operated by the Compagnie des agents de change, directed by the elected members of a stockbrokers' syndical council. The number of dealers in each of the different trading areas of the Bourse was limited. There were around 60 agents de change (the official stockbrokers). An agent de change had to be a French citizen, be nominated by a former agent or his estate, and be approved by the Minister of Finance, and he was appointed by decree of the President of the Republic. Officially, the agents de change could not trade for their own account nor even be a counterpart to someone who wanted to buy or sell securities with their aid; they were strictly brokers, that is, intermediaries. In the financial literature, the Paris Bourse is hence referred to as order-driven market, as opposed to quote-driven markets or dealer markets, where price-setting is handled by a dealer or market-maker. In Paris, only agents de change could receive a commission, at a rate fixed by law, for acting as an intermediary. However, parallel arrangements were usual in order to favor some clients' quote[clarification needed]. The Commodities Exchange was housed in the same building until 1889, when it moved to the present Bourse de commerce.[5] Moreover, until about the middle of the 20th century, a parallel market known as "La Coulisse" was in operation.[6]

Until the late 1980s, the market operated as an open outcry exchange, with the agents de change meeting on the exchange floor of the Palais Brongniart. In 1986, the Paris Bourse started to implement an electronic trading system. This was known generically as CATS (Computer Assisted Trading System), but the Paris version was called CAC (Cotation Assistée en Continu). By 1989, quotations were fully automated. The Palais Brongniart hosted the French financial derivatives exchanges MATIF and MONEP, until they were fully automated in 1998.

In 1988, new legislation was adopted that radically reformed the governance of the Paris stock exchange. Its ownership was transferred to the former Compagnie des agents de change [fr] ("brokers' society"), which, on the occasion renamed itself as the Société des Bourses Françaises (SBF, "French Stock Exchange Company"). In 1999, the SBF absorbed what remained of MATIF and MONEP and altered its name to Paris Bourse-SBF.[7] The next year, SBF was a leading participant of the merger that formed Euronext.

Buildings

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Following the collapse of John Law's Mississippi Company in 1721, the Paris bourse was located in his Hôtel de Nevers from 24 September 1724 to 27 June 1793, when it suspended operations in the chaotic context of the French Revolution. It reopened on 10 May 1795 in the Louvre Palace, in Anne of Austria's former summer apartment on the ground floor of the Petite Galerie,[8]: 73  and stayed there until 9 September 1795.[9] In September 1795, the Bourse again closed for a few months; it reopened in January 1796 in the Church of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, then in October 1807, moved to the Palais-Royal, and finally, in March 1818, to the former Couvent des Filles-Saint-Thomas [fr], adjacent to the site where the Palais Brongniart was already in construction. On 6 November 1926, the stock exchange finally moved to the latter building,[9]: 118-119  which was and remains owned by the City of Paris.

Following the 1988 reform, the Compagnie des agents de change, renamed SBF, left its iconic art deco seat at 4, place de la Bourse to move to the former Paris office of Chase Manhattan Bank at 39, rue Cambon.[10] That building remained the seat of SBF, then Euronext Paris until the latter moved to La Défense in 2015. The building on rue Cambon was subsequently restructured to house offices of Chanel.[11]

Operations

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It operates the MATIF futures exchange, which trades futures and options on interest rate products and commodities, and MONEP, equity and index futures and options. All products are traded electronically on the NSC system adopted by all of the Euronext members. Transactions are cleared through LCH.Clearnet. Cash settlement is T+2.[12] Trading hours are 9 am to 5:30 pm CET, Monday to Friday.

Structure and indices

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The French equities market is divided into three sections. The Premier Marché, formerly called the Official List, includes large French and foreign companies, and most Bond issues. The Second Marché, lists medium-sized companies, while nouveau marché lists fast-growing start up companies seeking capital to finance expansion, linked to Euro.nm, the European equity growth market. A third market, Marché Libre, is nonregulated, administered by Euronext Paris for transactions in securities not listed on the other three markets.

Euronext Paris calculates a family of indices. The CAC 40 is the exchange's benchmark, disseminated in real time. Its components are included in the broader SBF 120 Index, a benchmark for investment funds. The SBF 250 index, a benchmark for the long-term performance of equity portfolios, includes all of the SBF 120; it is structured by sector. The MIDCAC index includes 100 of the most liquid medium-size stocks on the Premier Marché and Nouveau Marché calculated on the basis of opening and closing prices, while the Second Marché index focuses on that market. Both indices are benchmarks for funds. The Nouveau Marché Index represents stocks in the growth market. The SBF-FCI index is based on a selection of convertible bonds that represent at least 70% of the total capitalization of this market, calculated twice daily. For derivatives, MONEP trades short-term and long-term stock options and futures and options on a family of Dow Jones indices. Euronext Commodities products include commodity future and options on European rapeseed and futures on rapeseed meal, European rapeseed oil, milling wheat, corn, wood pellets, dairy and Paris Real Estate.

Key figures

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For the fiscal year ending December 2004, Euronext Paris recorded sales of US$522 million, a −12.9% decrease in sales from 2003.

Euronext Paris has a US$2.9 trillion total market capitalization of listed companies and average daily trading value of its combined markets of approximately US$102 billion/€77 billion (as of 28 February 2007).

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Euronext Paris". Sustainable Stock Exchanges Initiative. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  2. ^ Foy, Simon (19 October 2023). "London Stock Exchange overtakes Paris to regain crown as Europe's biggest market". The Telegraph. ISSN 0307-1235. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  3. ^ Masud, Faarea (14 November 2022). "London loses position as most valuable European stock market". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 28 September 2023.
  4. ^ a b Ayers 2004, pp. 61–62.
  5. ^ Colling, Alfred (1949). La Prodigieuse Histoire de la Bourse. Paris: Société d'éditions économiques et financières. p. 301.
  6. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Coulisse" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  7. ^ "Paris Bourse-SBF". Bibliothèque nationale de France.
  8. ^ Jacques Hillairet. Dictionnaire historique des rues de Paris. Vol. II. Paris: Editions de Minuit.
  9. ^ a b Emmanuel Vidal (1910), The History and Methods of the Paris Bourse (PDF), Washington D.C.: U.S. Senate National Monetary Commission
  10. ^ "SBF-Bourse de Paris". Bibliothèque nationale de France.
  11. ^ "Siège social d'une Maison de Haute Couture, Paris". Ory Architecture. 2021.
  12. ^ "T+2 Standard settlement Lifecycle update". Euronext. 28 July 2014. Archived from the original on 2 April 2015. Retrieved 28 February 2015.
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48°52′07.42″N 02°19′37.81″E / 48.8687278°N 2.3271694°E / 48.8687278; 2.3271694