By browsing this website, you acknowledge the use of a simple identification cookie. It is not used for anything other than keeping track of your session from page to page. OK
0

Sovereign states, bondholders committees, and the London Stock Exchange in the nineteenth century (1827–68): new facts and old fictions

Bookmarks
Article
H

Flandreau, Marc

Oxford Review of Economic Policy

2013

29

4

Winter

668-696

financial market ; financial sector ; history ; public debt

United Kingdom

Financing and monetary policy

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxrep/grt031

English

Bibliogr.

"This paper unpacks the role of foreign bondholders committees in influencing market access following a default during the era before the creation of the British Corporation of Foreign Bondholders (CFB) in 1868. I argue that many ideas about this period need to be revisited. In particular, my evidence (which uses archival work to describe market microstructures) shows the importance of the London Stock Exchange (LSE) as a Court of Arbitration. I show how the LSE General Purpose Committee set up a system of Collective Action Clauses, requiring majority agreement among bondholders to permit market access. I argue that (unlike what research has argued thus far) this created powerful incentives for bondholders to get organized as they did. Previous models and historical ‘lessons' need to be recast."

Digital



Bookmarks