最早的华尔街财务信息报告

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引用次数: 0

摘要

在纽约时代广场(Times Square)的纳斯达克大楼(Nasdaq Building)内,有一个广播演播室,其弯曲的墙壁上排列着数十个电子屏幕,每个屏幕都显示着某只主要股票或大宗商品的“实时”交易价格。屏幕的中央显示了最显著的信息:价格和百分比的变化。绿色表示价格上涨,红色表示价格下跌。不太突出的信息占据了屏幕的底部:交易价格在左边;交易量在右边。工作室里的多个照明屏幕证实了一种信念,即技术一直处于金融行业的最前沿。19世纪的股票经纪人也持有同样的信念;当时,戴着大礼帽的人们聚集在一台机器周围,机器发出“滴答、滴答、滴答”的声音,把股票价格打印在从机器内部的一个轮子上解开的长条纸上。符号和价格由两个轮盘同时打印:一个是字母A-Z,另一个是数字0-9和1/8的分数。一种安装在活字轮下面的墨辊,印在从另一卷纸上展开的窄纸条上(普雷斯科特,1892年)一个现代的交易员可能不会觉得机器有用,但她在理解字母和数字的意思方面没有问题。同样,19世纪的股票经纪人可能不明白闪闪发光的电子板是什么,但他可能仍然能够识别一些缩写符号(如WU代表西联汇款),并理解价格的含义。尽管数字技术提供了多种改变股价显示格式的可能性,但股价显示格式似乎过于顽固,无法改变。类似的股票价格显示格式有模拟和数字两种
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Financial Information Reporting in the Earliest Wall Street
Inside the Nasdaq Building in Times Square in New York is a broadcast studio whose curved wall is lined up with dozens of electronic screens, each of them displaying the ‘real time’ trading price of a major stock or commodity. The centre of the screen shows the most prominent information: the change in price and percentage. A price in green means upward movement and a price in red means downward. The less prominent information occupies the bottom of the screen: the trading price is on the left; the volume traded is on the right. The multiple illuminated screens in the studio confirm a belief that technology has always been at the forefront of the financial industry. The same belief was held by nineteenth-century stock brokers; at that time men in top hats gathered around a machine that made a ‘tick, tick, tick’ sound when it printed out stock prices on a long strip of paper unwound from a wheel inside the machine. The symbol and the price were simultaneously printed by two type wheels: one had the letters A-Z, another had the numbers 0-9 and the fractions of 1/8. An ink roller installed beneath the type wheels impressed on a narrow paper strip unwound from another roll (Prescott, 1892). A modern day trader may not find the machine useful, but she will have no problem with understanding what the letters and numbers mean. Similarly, a nineteenth-century stockbroker may not understand what the gleaming electronic boards are, but he may still be able to recognise some of the abbreviated symbols (such as WU for Western Union) and understand what the prices mean. The format of stock price display seems to be too stubborn to change, even though digital technology offers many possibilities to reformat the price display. The similar format of stock price display in the analogue and the digital
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