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Caracas Stock Exchange

Market for equities and bonds


Market for equities and bonds

FieldValue
nameCaracas Stock Exchange
nativenameBolsa de Valores de Caracas
logo[[File:Bolsa de Valores de Caracas (emblem).png120pxCaracas Stock Exchange Logo]]
image[[File:Edificio BVC.jpg150pxCaracas Stock Exchange]]
typeStock exchange
cityCaracas
countryVenezuela
foundationJanuary 21, 1947
key_peopleVíctor Julio Flores (CEO)
currencyVES
listings60
indexesIBC
homepage[www.bolsadecaracas.com](https://www.bolsadecaracas.com)

The Caracas Stock Exchange or Bolsa de Valores de Caracas (BVC) is a stock exchange located in Caracas, Venezuela. Established in 1947, BVC merged with a competitor in 1974.

History and Performance

The origins of the Venezuelan stock market can be traced to the end of the colonial era, when in 1805 Don Bruno Abasolo and Don Fernando Key Muñoz founded the Casa de Bolsa y Recreación de los Comerciantes y Labradores in Caracas. The exchange was officially founded on January 21, 1947 and inaugurated its first trading session on April 21 of the same year, after previously trading stocks over the counter. On May 6, 1976, the assembly of shareholders decided to change the denomination of the institution to Bolsa de Valores de Caracas C.A., and initiated a new operating structure composed of 43 shareholders, or puestos de bolsa, an amount that would be increased to 63 members in 1995.

Performance

In 1990, with an increase of 602%, the market was the second-best performing that year (after Poland).

In April 2007, 60 companies were listed on the BVC, with less than half being traded regularly. BVC experienced a severe decline in traded volumes since the mid-1990s as a result of a declining economy, the migration of stocks to the U.S. markets in the form of American Depositary Receipts (ADRs), corporate takeovers with a concomitant reduction in the number of shares available for trade and an increasing country risk that has frightened investors, particularly foreign investors. Daily trading volume decreased from the equivalent of $25 to $30 million in 1997 to less than $1 million by 2000. The BVC survived during this period thanks to a growing trade of government debt securities. Stock prices, measured by the Indice Bursátil Caracas, were also depressed during the 1990s and have yet to recover to the highest ever levels experienced in 1991. According to the International Finance Corporation, the market value of the BVC was $7 billion in 2000, or just about 6 percent of GDP. In 2005 total transactions on the BVC totaled USD$438 million.

Electronic Exchange

BVC has been completely electronic since February 1992, when a modern electronic trading system developed by the Vancouver Stock Exchange entered operations. On July 2, 1999 another technological change was made when the SIBE (Sistema Integrado Bursátil Electrónico), electronic trading system was officially incorporated into the Caracas Stock Exchange.

Notes

References

  1. (16 December 1999). "The foresight saga". The Economist.
  2. Garay U., ''El Mercado Bursatil Venezolano: Evolucion y Perpectivas'', Debates IESA 2001
  3. Urbi Garay & Maximiliano Gonzalez, ''CEO and Director Turnover in Venezuela'', Inter-American Development Bank
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