european financial thought in the early twentieth...
TRANSCRIPT
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European Financial Thought in the Early Twentieth Century
Abstract
Corporate Finance is a fashionable field in schools of Economics throughout the World. Al-
though the main epistemological break to identify its scientific character may be established
in the decade of the 1950s, this paper demonstrates how much developed financial thought
there was in Europe before the First World War. Thanks to considerable growth of interna-
tional trade, corporations, and multinationals (i.e. rising globalization) during this phase of
European civilization, Stock Exchanges flourished in all European countries. Philosophers,
businessmen, professors, and lawyers disseminated their burgeoning erudition in financial
knowledge, and several authors made large contributions in books devoted to legal features
of human economic actions, and in textbooks devoted to political economy.
Word count: 6, 551
1. Introduction
Dealing with important issues that are related to wealth and revenue, corporate finan-
cial literacy and knowledge may determine an individuals’ success in life, or even their sur-
vival in old age. Finance is usually considered to be a complex science, among common
people, often driven by the perception that it consists of unsatisfactory explanations of the
mystery and volatility of financial markets.
Corporate Finance is a scientific field today, as the need to understand financial mar-
kets is widespread, and receives a great deal of attention. All over the world Finance has
carved out a large space in schools of Economics and Management in recent decades. Spe-
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cialized departments of Finance in most Economics and Management schools have devel-
oped extensive scientific knowledge on financial markets.1
The history of Corporate Financial Thought is also a well cultivated field today, led
by experts who made great efforts to identify its main contributors. The 1950s have been
identified by many as the breakthrough moment for the birth of the science of Finance. Mo-
tivating this paper is the aim of recalling contributors from the late nineteenth century and
the early 1900s, before the First World War, as major cases of literacy and erudition in
Finance, who provided much literature in this field.
Professors of Finance and scho-
larly journals in the field offer considerable scientific advances, and financial markets’ so-
phistication benefit from ever greater financial literacy.
Section 2 will describe the sophisticated financial culture of the early twentieth cen-
tury in Europe, revealing how accumulated expertise in domestic production and trade, in
international commercial links, insurance contracts, currency transactions, share trading,
bond issuance, and derivatives operations, brought the pressing need for sophisticated finan-
cial markets. Section 3 will deal with the existence of local, regional, and national Stock
Exchanges, which were part of a world network of financial relationships in which London,
Paris, Berlin, Vienna, Milan, Madrid, Lisbon, and New York were the leading global mar-
kets.2 Family financial culture and erudition in some social circles could stimulate a scientif-
ic approach to finance, and mathematics were also applied to the concept of stochastic
processes, by Louis Bachelier in his doctoral dissertation The Theory of Speculation, de-
scribing stock price evolution.3
1 Miller, 1999: p. 95.
Section 3 also addresses the issues that were current in text-
books from this time, responding to the fact that local and regional exchanges permitted im-
2 Cassis, 2006. 3 Bachelier, 1900.
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provement in the liquidity and visibility of listed corporations’ share and bond issues, also
promoting reduced transaction fees. Section 4 presents the conclusions.
2. Late Nineteenth-Century Globalization and Financial Markets
Investment strategies to manage diversified portfolios are intimidating concepts for
most people even today, but, a vast financial elite operating businesses in the late nineteenth
century developed practical expertise in portfolios management.4 With operations that un-
derpinned the urban centers and their role in the broad networking system of information,
expectations, investment, and transactions, they belonged to wealthy social circles.5 Indu-
strialization in the British Iles and on the European Continent had brought large corporations
to the fore of economic activity, having large volumes of commodities to consume, sell, and
export, while a number of spot and term (derivatives) contracts were established among dis-
tant economic agents.6 Individual wealth could rarely supply enough capital for such large
businesses, but financial institutions could provide a mechanism for gathering capital and
rewarding private savings, whatever the amount to be made available and involved in those
businesses.7 Banks and Stock Exchanges gathered the available savings and could help to
channel them to useful financial applications, providing attractive rewards to capital owners
who were interested in their services.8
4 Jones, 1994.
Shareholding positions in corporations could provide
good rewards to (small) private investors. Safety, confidence, and low information costs
5 Foreman-Peck, 2011. 6 Hertner; Jones, 1986. 7 Cassis, 1997. 8 Bordo et alli, 2003.
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were top values to fuel this mechanism of transforming savings into investment.9
Not only were transports and posts working efficiently thanks to railroads and sail
and steam shipping, but also telegraphs were installed. Press provided daily information on
Stock Exchange transactions and asset quotations. Transparency was considered an essential
feature for advertising stocks. Stock Exchanges published daily bulletins containing infor-
mation about the listed issues, bids and ask offers, and prices of the executed transactions.
Specialized newspapers devoted attention to corporations operating on all continents, even
in the most remote regions of the world. Capital gains and dividend pay-outs were an-
nounced worldwide.
Informa-
tion costs had decreased dramatically.
10 The telegraph was a powerful instrument in decreasing information
costs, and a world network was made available thanks to submarine cable technology.
Throughout the last decades of the century all Stock Exchanges were in touch with each
other, and telephones also began to offer yet another information network.11
Dealers, accountants, brokers, bankers, and finance experts in general, formed a
technical staff that operated according to behavioral rules derived from codes of honor in-
tended to inspire confidence, transparency, and trust. Foreign and domestic Treasury Bonds,
as well as corporation shares and debentures were very attractive. Because of superior Euro-
pean technology this period led to the exploitation of business opportunities on all other con-
tinents.
12 Mining (including precious metals), agribusiness, railroad building, shipping,
banking and insurance, as well as trading and commerce in general were transferred from
the European business environment context to all other endeavors.13
9 Jones, 1996.
European investment
10 O’Rourke; Williamson, 1999. 11 Foreman-Peck, 2001. 12 Jones, 2010. 13 Jones, 2005.
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and capital moved to North, Central, and South America, as well as to Asia and Africa (es-
pecially after the Berlin Conference of the late 1880s). In most cases emigration accompa-
nied the transfer of savings and other flows of capital, leading to a universal spread of Euro-
pean economic culture and international financial expertise.
Thanks to the gold-standard regime, the monetary context was favorable to interna-
tional business, foreign direct investment (FDI), and financial connections. Free capital
movements, including repatriation of profits and dividends, and fixed exchange rates pro-
vided an excellent business background, minimizing transfer risk because of minimizing
exchange-rate volatility to the gold-entrance and gold-exit points that arbitrage could man-
age.14 This financial system broke up in August 1914, when the Austrian empire declared
war on Serbia, and all other European nations decided to support one side or the other in this
conflict.15 Nevertheless, before 1914, a European financial civilization circled the planet,
from the UK to Southern Europe, Canada and the USA, from Germany to Eastern European
regions and Russia, from continental European countries to Malaysia and the Philippines,
and even from the UK and Belgium to Portugal, Angola, and Mozambique.16
14 Officer, 1989.
As Keynes
(1924) says, “What an extraordinary episode in the economic progress of man that age was
which came to an end in August 1914! (…) The inhabitant of London could order by tele-
phone, sipping his morning tea in bed, the various products of the whole earth, in such quan-
tity as he might see fit, and reasonably expect their early delivery upon his doorstep; he
could at the same moment and by the same means adventure his wealth in the natural re-
sources and new enterprises of any quarter of the world, and share, without exertion or even
trouble, in their prospective fruits and advantages; or he could decide to couple the security
15 Hardach, 1987. 16 Foreman-Peck, 2001(a).
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of his fortunes with the good faith of the townspeople of any substantial municipality in
any continent that fancy or information might recommend.”17
Considerable expertise existed in creating management boards, writing statutes for
corporations, and listing issuers on Stock Exchanges. Law and (commercial) codes were
published in all European countries to regulate all of the many activities and to avoid fraud
and embezzlement. Legal environments were carefully described in abundant literature de-
voted to the subject, and the discussion of institutional frameworks was based on knowledge
of current-day operations for capital manipulation and financial decision-making.
18 Text-
books on law necessarily dealt with the legal aspects of Stock Exchanges, including organi-
zational details, rules for operations, and regulations for brokers’ activity.19
All countries had their Stock Exchanges located in the main urban centers. The urban
network was also a financial network, made of one, two, or more financial poles for trading
and finance. Youssef Cassis tells on the main capitals of capital in Europe in his 2006 book
with that very title (Capitals of Capital). Local, regional, and national-level Stock Ex-
changes fueled capital applications and the financial markets. Powerful families and social
networks of well-known persons directed these operations. Aristocrats, bankers, deputies,
and other politicians, as well as successful traders inspired confidence in investors and
people in general, by sitting on the boards of corporations and free-standing companies.
20
The institutional development of Stock Exchanges in Europe accompanied the long-
run historical needs of economic agents. In the Middle Ages exchange letters were trans-
acted in Paris on a bridge, the Pont-au-Change, while Lisbon pioneered international trade
negotiations for commodity contracts and shipping in the early sixteenth century as a result
17 Page 11. 18 Cagigal, 2009. 19 Cosack, 1905. Vivante, 1902. Franchi, 1890. Marghieri, 1886. 20 Wilkins and Schröter,1998.
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of the Discoveries.21 Bruges is also recalled for its pioneering open-air business and trade
meetings circa 1580.22 Even so, before the First World War financial affairs belonged pri-
marily to the London Stock Exchange, thanks to the British hegemony over world markets.
From the Bank of England, transactions moved to the street Change-Alley, with the first
building - Capel Court - being made available only in 1802. 23
If the definition of a Stock Exchange includes the presence of corporations and share
trading, the large European trade companies become the historical benchmark to be consi-
dered.
24 British, French, and Dutch East India The seventeenth-century Companies were top
venture-capital organizations for trade settlement connections with India, Indonesia, and
other Asian regions. De la Vega’s book Confusion de Confusiones, written in 1688, is a pio-
neering textbook on ethics for behavior finance.25 In this work, prudent advising, training in
profit and loss forecasts, permanent management of assets, and patience are the main specu-
lator’s rules, as revealed in a dialogue between a philosopher, a merchant, and a shareholder.
The book addresses the operations of the Amsterdam Stock Exchange and stock markets in
general. The Amsterdam Stock Exchange Association was a leading financial center in or-
ganizing and regulating share trading in Northern continental Europe.26 Organizational as-
pects led Paris to have two stock Exchanges in that city, the Parquet and the Coulisse.27
21 Justino, 1994.
“The Parquet was the regulated market organized by the Compagnie des Agents de Change
(CAC), the semi-private body of 60 official brokers (agents de change) with a legal mono-
poly on transactions. These brokers were recruited on strict social and wealth conditions
22In front of Van Den Bursen’s family house, the reason why Stock Exchanges became called Bourses. Ulrich, 1906, p. 42. 23 Boudon, 1898. Stringham, 2002. 24 Poitras, 2000. 25 Cardoso, 2002. 26 Stringham, 2003 27 The Exchange moved from Rue Quincapoix, to the Soissons palace, and to the Palais Brongniart. Bedarride, 1901.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_East_India_Company�
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which provided high guarantees to the investors (…). By contrast, the Coulisse was a loose-
ly organized market (with no juridical structure until 1884), illegal de jure but de facto tole-
rated and even protected by the government. Its members (the coulissiers) acted both as bro-
kers and jobbers”.28
Some authors also mention the Middle Age fairs as Exchanges to negotiate interna-
tionally and operate money exchange rates, as issuing was a manorial political privilege that
resulted in a variety of circulating currencies.
29 The expertise gained was business-
instructive and cumulative, leading to a continuous globalizing influence of Europe on busi-
ness venture, administration practice, and capital raising systems.30
The First World War interrupted all of this European prosperity. It brought a bloody
conflict that lasted for four dramatic years, the consequences of which changed the face of
the world. The large empires’ traditional hegemony faced newly industrialized allied coun-
tries. The extension of the conflict along the lengthy battle line, from Belgium to Southern
Europe, paralyzed all normal businesses.
31
28 Hautcoeur, Rezaee, and Riva, 2010, p. 4.
Priority was given to hostilities. Universities
closed for some periods of time, as did Stock Exchanges, and the conditions for globaliza-
tion were disrupted. Submarine warfare put an end to Atlantic shipping. The gold-standard
suddenly came to an end, as military expenditure in all nations threw convertibility into dis-
array. The conflict exhausted all nations, all armies, and all families. So balanced were the
potential fighting forces on the two sides of the conflict that it led to a stalemate. The inter-
vention of the United States tipped the balance. The sway of the American military forces
reflected the American economic superiority. By the end of the conflict, Europe was a conti-
nent in ruins. Fighting had ravaged not only the battlefields but also national economies.
29 Ulrich, 1906, p. 94, identifies 1304 as the origin of the Exchange in Paris, 1549 in Lyon, 1554 in Toulouse, 1566 in Rouhen, 1571 in Bordeaux, and 1691 in Montpéllier. 30 Rambaud, 1884. 31 Hardach, 1987.
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Destruction, death, and annihilation were the image of the face of Europe. Financial centers
had ceased their functions. London, Paris, Frankfurt, and all the other Stock Exchanges had
reduced their volume of operations dramatically.32 The great financial center was now New
York, on the other side of the Atlantic.33
Such a devastating conflict naturally brought difficult times for reconstruction in the
1920s, a Great Depression in the 30s, and a Second World War from 1939 to 1945, which
would wrack Europe again.
34
In such a context, the abundance of European financial literature on Stock Exchanges
before 1914 gains a new rationality, as it corresponds to a European civilizational heyday.
Demographic losses only mirror the break in prosperity that
the old continent suffered for so long.
3. The History of Corporate Finance, as a scientific field
According to Miller’s (1999) history of Finance, the 1950s were the breakthrough
decade for intellectual achievement in Finance and Financial Economics, thanks to Corpo-
rate Finance and the Asset Pricing Theory. The epistemological watershed was very clear,
and consisted of introducing mathematical modeling methodologies. The scientific devel-
opments achieved in the field are today universally praised and globally recognized. Eight
economists received a Nobel Prize in Economics for their contributions to Finance. In 1990
the Prize was awarded to three authors, Harry Markowitz, William Sharpe, and Merton Mil-
ler. Curiously, when Markowitz concluded his Ph.D. at the University of Chicago, Milton
Friedman opposed the dissertation on the grounds that it wasn’t really economics. This as-
sertion in fact heralded the specialized character of Corporate Finance, and resulted from 32 Aldcroft, 1987. 33 Michie, 1987. 34 Milward, 1987.
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considering that it was an exotic approach that was being pursued for practical aspects re-
lated with transactions in stock markets.35
In fact, the present value of an investment was understood as the expected value –
that is, the probability-weighted mean value – of its possible future outcomes.
36
Seven years later, in 1997, Robert Merton and Myron Scholes were also awarded the
Nobel Prize, for introducing option pricing and Algebraic and Mathematical Statistics for
stock options and portfolio selection, thanks to a new method to determine the value of de-
rivatives. Most economists believe that Fischer Black would have also accompanied them,
but he had passed away two years before, in 1995.
For risk
assessment, the variance (squared deviations of those outcomes around the mean) was pro-
posed as a good measure. Such an approach stresses the importance of statistical evidence of
past experience in stock markets, as time series treatment is crucial for these estimations. For
these reasons, Corporate Finance stimulates economic history studies on stock markets, and
paves the way to co-operation with economists who devote their research to economic, busi-
ness, and financial history. A good example of such co-operation is the estimation of the
Cost of Capital, as it is based on long-term time series from historical datasets that record
daily observed values.
Just last year, 2013, the Nobel Prize was given to distinguished contributors in
Finance, Eugene Fama, Lars Peter Hansen, and Robert Shiller, for their empirical analysis of
asset price.
35 Rubinstein, 2003. 36 Stabile, 2005.
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In spite of this tremendous turning point in the science of Corporate Finance in the
second half of the twentieth century,37 it is recognized that the Great Depression (1929-
1933) strongly stimulated thought about stock markets, particularly in the USA. The text-
book by Benjamin Graham and David Dodd, Security Analysis, published in 1934, is a good
example to mention, and John Burr Williams’ Theory of Investment Value, published in
1938, is also important. Both books were very popular in the USA, where New York was the
leading financial center of the world. The crash brought a compelling stimulus for financial
information on stock markets or, at the very least, curiosity about the subject.38
In Europe the scientific interest for financial markets was largely spread throughout
all countries much earlier than the 1929 crash. The European literature is replete with erudite
descriptions of the Stock Exchanges and stock markets, dealings with legal aspects, discus-
sions of the effects of regulations, and international comparisons of organizational features.
If a mathematical approach is required to define the scientific character for contributions, we
may cite the pioneering work of Louis Bachelier (1870-1946), The Theory of Speculation in
stock markets, from 1900, which is a seminal introduction to the concept of stochastic
processes to mathematically describe stock price evolution.
39
37 Poitras, 2005.
He may be rightly considered
as a founding father of financial mathematics, opening the way to the Brownian motion
model to evaluate stock options. According to Preda (2004: 351): “Louis Bachelier appears
(…) as one member in a series of economists intensely preoccupied with developing finan-
cial economics. This, however, does not diminish his merits: Bachelier was a creative devel-
oper of ideas and preoccupations that other economists had already formulated”.
38 Kindleberger, 1987. In Spain, Galvarriato, 1935 is a good example, for its extensive influ-ence. 39 Preda, 2003.
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However, this mathematical contribution met with little success in the French acad-
emy. It was presented as a doctoral dissertation at the Sorbonne, in Paris, and was approved,
but without distinction. It also gained little recognition thereafter. No teaching position was
offered to Bachelier in Paris, who found his first teaching position only in 1909 and a per-
manent position only in 1927, in Besançon, which was a remote university in comparison
with his alma mater.
Mathematic contributions to Economics often left their pioneering authors in obli-
vion, and Bachelier is only one among many. Cournot’s theories on monopoly, duopoly,
oligopoly, and perfect-competition markets are perhaps the most well-known case. They
were made available in his book Recherches dans les Principes Mathematiques de la Théo-
rie des Richesses, which was published in 1838, but although he pursued an academic career
and managed to reach a rectorship position, few had come to understand their importance by
the date of his death, in 1877.40
The dominant financial paradigm in Europe in the early twentieth century was not
mathematical. Many books of wide practical and educational interest on the stock markets
were available, in a cultural context in which economists had already established the market
theory, from Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, Jean Baptiste Say, James Mill, John Stuart Mill, and
Cairnes, to Marshall, Menger, Wieser, and Bohm-Bawerk, to quote only the most popular
and well-known authors.
41
40 Ekelund and Herbert, 1975, p 209.
To the extent that their contributions were spread among busi-
nessmen, intellectuals, and academicians, the understanding of Stock Exchange operations
could be improved, as Exchanges also work as a market, which is quite clear in Courtois
(1902), for whom trading is absolutely required for producing and consuming. Moreover,
41 “Cairnes, Mill’s most outstanding disciple, in his comments on the text of the fifth edition of the Principles, defended the joint stock principle (…). Mill (…) inserted a paragraph em-bodying Cairnes’ observations in the sixth edition”. Schwartz, 1972: 139-140.
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economic progress was identified with credit and the funding via stock markets, because the
foundation of a limited liability corporation is based on shares that raise the capital for the
business purposes.42
Commodities and financial asset transactions could now work in different places as
well as in the same. But limitations on who could or could not participate in Stock Exchange
operations became a feature of the literature. Insolvent and bankrupt persons and all those
who had failed to fulfill stock exchange requirements were barred from the sessions. Also
excluded were those convicted or merely accused of crimes, as were insane persons and the
children. Unless they had their own business, women were also refused entry in the com-
mercial codes of most countries.
This was the way to support a labor division economy.
43
Most of the authors were not aiming an academic readership audience, and were
more interested in financial speculation on Stock Exchanges assets and price behavior. This
is the case of Regnault (1863).
44 Financial speculation and horse-race gambling even stimu-
lated calculations for the use of probabilities. Chateaudun, who was a private secretary of
Rotchild, became a banker, and published the Traité des valeurs mobilières et des opéra-
tions de Bourse: Placement et speculation, (Treatise on securities and Stock Exchange oper-
ations), for financial speculators, in 1870: “In the late 1860s, Lefevre started a nationwide
investment company called Union Financière and published an investment journal, the
Journal des placements financiers. In his Traité, he developed the graphic method known as
the ‘payoff diagram’".45
42 Graziani, 1904.
According to Supino (1898) it is wrong to accuse stock markets of
speculation, because they belong to capitalist economies and are a necessary element of cap-
ital circulation, interest rate convergence, and price equilibrium. Market efficiency was
43 Ulrich, 2011, p. 151-154. 44 Preda, 2004: 351. 45 Preda, 2004: 351.
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commonly assumed as a basic fact, and Supino believes in it. 46
Arbitrage is important, we say now. The activity was already considered to be highly
important to society by Hayaux du Tilly (1901), arguing that while trading in commodities
interests only some people, everybody must recognize that financial assets serve everybody.
In his opinion this means that governments cannot be blind toward Stock Exchanges, but
should keep them under the scrutiny of the central state. Such a concept is close to regarding
Stock Exchange functions as a public good, to be preserved, implemented, and regulated.
In his opinion stock markets
facilitate trading and exchange, so accusations against Stock Exchanges are similar to those
against machines, factories, and new technologies.
This was not the common opinion in the early days, when self-regulated Exchanges
arose following merchants’ and traders’ initiatives, and these competed for their intermedia-
tion role. 47 Individuals’ associations in Britain and Northern continental Europe freely dis-
covered the best organizational and governance principles, by themselves without state regu-
lation. However, in the late nineteenth century and early 1900s, voices calling for state regu-
lation became loud and quite effective. Political economy textbooks included definitions of
Stock Exchanges as concentrated markets located in large urban trade centers where busi-
nessmen met for negotiations and transactions involving large amounts of capital.48 So too,
the rules for operations and penalties pertaining to brokers’ activity were meticulously de-
scribed, especially regarding unfair competition among them and false rumors.49
In the second half of the nineteenth century Commercial Codes had been established
in most of the European countries, including some chapters dedicated to the regulation of
Stock Exchange operations, from listing to transactions. Punishments were prescribed, and
46 For the abandonment of the efficient markets hypothesis, Haugen, 1999. 47 Stringham, 2002, p. 2. 48 Colson, 10903, vol. 2. 49 Moysen, 1904.
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textbooks commented on these various issues, thereby spreading information and financial
literacy.50
The recognition of the utility of Stock Exchanges for the economic system comes al-
so from the need to collect small-pocket savings for government loans in public debt. Be-
cause confidence in governments increases bonds’ prices,
Detailed regulations for Stock Exchange or brokers’ codes sometimes also in-
cluded the opening hours, duration of the sessions, timing for short-selling, and the schedule
for term (derivatives) transactions.
51 stock markets reflect a nation’s
vigor and credibility, it is said. As capital mobility is an important condition for private
businesses and public credit in all countries, its efficient provision by Stock Exchanges for
public works and collective improvements make governments also dependent on them,
while regulating their activity, simultaneously.52
Taxes on Stock Exchange operations were (and still are) a difficult matter. On the
one hand, it is considered that the access to stock market services should be simple, cheap,
and attractive. On the other hand, financial operations provide means for increasing produc-
tion, distribution, selling, and the opportunity for such benefits should be taxed.
53
Transactions (on commodities or securities) were seen as the top expression of alter-
native uses for capital (transfers among shareholders’ hands in the vast world of business).
What tax-
es and at what rates might be adopted, and what effects on financial operations may occur is
a technical discussion that already existed in the early twentieth century.
54
50 Thaler, 1900.
In this way, Stock Exchanges were viewed as a thermometer of economic wealth in a capi-
51 Ulrich, 1906, p. 55, quoting Piccinelli, 1897. 52 Ulrich, 1906, 65, quoting Laveleye. 53 Weil, 1902. 54 Buriat, 1903.
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talist society, according to Proudon’s sizeable book Manuel du spéculateur à la Bourse.55
As a philosopher, he identified stock markets as hidden engines of financial civilizations,
whose importance is greater than universities, theater, conferences, courts, or the churches’
power. In his surplus-value theory, Marx describes profits and interest as rewards for capi-
talists according to the amount of capital advanced for the productive system.56
The investors’ perspective, however, was the dominant approach. It was explained
that if investors preferred safe and risk-free applications the interest rate would be lower,
while if they accepted some risk they could get much higher rewards for the capital in-
vested.
57
A more mechanical view establishes that Stock Exchanges provoke centripetal and
centrifugal forces, according to international competition and organization rules for their
operations.
In the first case it was usual to obtain capital at a 3% interest rate (or even less),
and family fathers might need to accept such a modest return, while risk lovers could look
for higher rewards, against the possibility of suffering future losses. Paul Lafargue (Marx’
son-in-law) came to the conclusion that risk and revenue were highly and positively corre-
lated and expressed it in a very clear way. The mix of decisions is considered as a normal
behavior. He is not far from the idea that risk-lovers’ investment in announced and listed
securities or projects is undertaken so that the estimated (or expected) return may surpass (or
at least equal) the market-determined free-risk rate.
58 Law and legal codes sought to identify and clarify the shareholders’ rights
when the established legal proceedings were followed.59
55 A 511-pages book.
Not only did they pursue this func-
tion, but it is fair to also recognize the pedagogical character of these books in disseminating
56 Marx, 1901. 57 Lafargue, 1897. 58 Sayous, 1898. 59 Boudon, 1896.
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knowledge on financial markets, and in providing financial literacy to users.60 They offered
real guidelines for action in describing Stock Exchange operations and the actors in them.61
Many books may also be considered as glossaries for financial vocabulary, as there is
a technical language made of special words and expressions in each language.
62 These books
frequently presented considerable information on banking issues, securities in general, and
public debt.63 They provided training in reasoning about financial matters in a political
economy perspective. 64 The entries on Bourse at Dictionaries, are summations.65
Ruy Ennes Ulrich (1883-1966) also wrote a textbook in Portuguese On Stock Ex-
changes and their Operations (Da Bolsa e Suas Operações). This was his doctoral disserta-
tion topic at the University of Coimbra Law School, in 1906. He mentions a number of im-
portant books then available in France (36), Italy (11), Spain,
66 Germany,67 and the UK,68 as
having refined treatments of legal matters, as well as discussions of regulations and organi-
zational features of the Stock Exchanges.69
These authors had a wide variety of professions. From philosophers to law practi-
tioners, from businessmen to academic professors, some of them devoted their lives to man-
agement and worked as CEOs or executives in large corporations, using their financial ex-
It is quite clear that Ulrich’s concept of equili-
brium stems from some fields of Physics, and comes through a large bibliography, with a
dominant French character.
60 Chevilliard, 1904. 61 Bozerian, 1859. 62 Fontaine, 1905. 63 Ferraris, 1892. 64 Boudon, 1898. 65 Raffalovich, 1900. Vidal, 1896. 66 Carreras y Gonzalez, 1865. 67 Gründt, 1899. 68 Passos, 1905. 69 Ulrich 1906; Mata and Costa, 2013.
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pertise in the management and strategic governance of large domestic or international busi-
nesses.70
But this tide of literature was interrupted. “In London, the world’s foremost financial
center, the week before the outbreak of the First World War saw the breakdown of the mar-
kets, culminating with the closure for the first time ever of the London Stock Exchange on
Friday 31 July. Outside the Bank of England a long anxious queue waited to change bank
notes for gold sovereigns. Bankers believed that a run on the banks was underway, threaten-
ing the collapse of the banking system – all with the nation on the eve of war”.
71 The dec-
ades following the War were difficult times, too, in one way or another.72 The inter-wars
period remain as a break between the two huge conflicts, while the second half of the cen-
tury would bring reconstruction and prosperity.73
Contributions in the 1950s to Corporate
Finance and the development of this scientific field reflect these historical conditions.
4. Conclusion
Main contributions may be quoted from French authors such as Curtois (1902),
Fontaine (1905), Hayaux du Tilly (1901), and Guillard (1877), from Italian books such as
Supino (1875 and 1898), Vivante (1902) and Tedeschi (1897), from English texts such as
Passos (1905), and from the Portuguese Ulrich (1906). They all pioneered the study of cor-
porate finance and financial markets, in offering significant textbooks for financial markets
users. Their knowledge and the practical character of their discussions was very rich and
70 Mata and Costa, 2013. 71 Roberts, 2013, https://itunes.apple.com/br/book/saving-city-great-financial/id784312364?mt=11. 72 Milward, 1987. 73 Aldcroft, 1987.
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useful at a time when the balance of financial power was still in the European cities and their
financial markets, although New York was beginning to gain an important role on the other
side of the Atlantic. As forerunners in the field of Financial Thought they all deserve to be
considered as the first wave of contributors in the history of the field.
As in many other fields, in the History of Financial Thought, one may point out a bi-
as toward the preference for recent important developments, and mathematical and English-
language contributors. This should not lead us to forget the many traditional forerunners.
Most of them were non-mathematical and non-English language contributors. These often
overlooked authors, some of whom were well-trained economists, paved the way in spread-
ing common and practical knowledge, to vast numbers of the global population. Many dec-
ades before the introduction of financial economics, investment strategy, and the study of
risk in asset investments by American experts in the 1950s and thereafter, financial know-
ledge was based on experience, observation, and investment decision-making processes that
were dictated by the particular needs of the time.
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