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Information About

Tokyo Stock Exchange




  Company Type Privately-held KK
  Company Logo
  Company Slogan
  Foundation 1949
  Location Tokyo , Japan
  Key People Taizo Nishimuro (Chairman/CEO)<br>Yasuo Tobiyama (MD/COO/CFO)
  Num Employees 718
  Industry Securities exchange


The , or TSE, is one of the largest Stock Exchange markets in the world by monetary volume, second only to the New York Stock Exchange . It currently lists 2,271 domestic companies and 31 foreign companies, with a total market capitalization of over 3 trillion USD.


STRUCTURE


The TSE is incorporated as a Kabushiki Kaisha with nine directors, four auditors and eight executive officers. Its headquarters are located at 2-1 Nihombashi Kabutocho, Chuo-ku , Tokyo , Japan . Its operating hours are from 9:00 to 11:00 am, and from 1:00 to 3:00 pm. From April 24 2006 the afternoon trading session started at its usual time of 12:30pm

Stocks listed on the TSE are separated into the First Section (for large companies), the Second Section (for mid-sized companies), and the "Mothers" section (for high-growth startup companies). As of March 2006, there are 1,721 First Section companies, 489 Second Section companies and 156 Mothers companies.

The main indices tracking the TSE are the Nikkei 225 index of companies selected by the '' Nihon Keizai Shimbun '' (Japan's largest business newspaper), the TOPIX index based on the share prices of First Section companies, and the J30 index of large industrial companies maintained by Japan's major broadsheet newspapers.

89 domestic and 19 foreign securities companies participate in TSE trading. ''See: Members Of The Tokyo Stock Exchange ''

Other TSE-related institutions include:



HISTORY



Prewar history

The Tokyo Stock Exchange was established on May 15 , 1878 as the ''Tokyo Kabushiki Torihikijo'' (東京株式取引所) under the direction of then-Finance Minister Okuma Shigenobu and capitalist advocate Shibusawa Eiichi . Trading began on June 1 , 1878 .

In 1943, the exchange was combined with ten other stock exchanges in major Japanese cities to form a single . The combined exchange was shut down and reorganized shortly after the bombing of Nagasaki .


Postwar history

The Tokyo Stock Exchange reopened under its current Japanese name on May 16 , 1949 , pursuant to the new Securities Exchange Act.

The trading floor of the TSE was closed on April 30 , 1999 , and the exchange switched to electronic trading for all transactions. A new facility, called , opened on May 9 , 2000 .

In 2001, the TSE restructured itself as a corporation. (Before this time, it was a membership organization.)


IT issues

The exchange was only able to operate for 90 minutes on November 1 , 2005 due to bugs with a newly installed transactions system, developed by Fujitsu , which was supposed to help cope with higher trading volumes. The interruption in trading was the worst in the history of the exchange. {Link without Title} Trading was suspended for four-and-a-half hours.

During the initial public offering of , the TSE acknowledged that its system was at fault in the Mizuho trade. On 21 December , Takuo Tsurushima, chief executive of the TSE, and two other senior executives resigned over the Mizuho affair.

On January 17 , 2006 , the Nikkei 225 fell 2.8%, its fastest drop in nine months, as investors sold stocks across the board in the wake of a raid by prosecutors on internet company Livedoor . The Tokyo Stock Exchange closed early on January 18 due to the trade volume threatening to exceed the exchange's computer system's capacity of 4.5 million trades per day. This was called the "livedoor shock." The exchange quickly increased its order capacity to five million trades a day. {Link without Title}


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