Nasdaq Copenhagen

The Nasdaq Copenhagen, formerly known as the Copenhagen Stock Exchange (Danish: Københavns Fondsbørs), is an international marketplace for Danish securities, including shares, bonds, treasury bills and notes, and financial futures and options.[3]

Nasdaq Copenhagen
Københavns Fondsbørs
TypeStock Exchange
LocationCopenhagen, Denmark
Founded1625[1]
1808[2]
OwnerNasdaq Nordic
Key peopleBjørn Sibbern (Director)
Market capEuro 206 billion (Sep 2007)
VolumeEuro 172.5 billion
(Q4 2006 - Q3 2007)
IndicesKAX Index
OMX Copenhagen 20
KFX Index
Websitenasdaqomxnordic.com
This building, Børsen, housed the Copenhagen Stock Exchange until 1974

Nasdaq Copenhagen is one of the Nasdaq Nordic Exchanges. Nasdaq Nordic goes back to the 2003 merger of OM AB and HEX plc to form OMX and is, since February 2008, part of Nasdaq, Inc. (formerly known as NASDAQ OMX Group).

Background and structure

The exchange was converted to a limited company in 1996 with share capital issued in a ratio of 60-20-20 to members, issuers of shares, and issuers of bonds. In 1997 the FUTOP Clearing Center A/S, the Danish derivatives market, became a wholly owned subsidiary. FUTOP issues, clears, and guarantees futures and options on shares, indices, and interest rate products. FUTOP products can be traded electronically. In 1998, the CSE and the Stockholmsbörsen formed the NOREX Alliance, a step toward developing a Nordic securities market. Normal trading sessions are from 09:00am to 05:00pm on all days of the week except Saturdays, Sundays and holidays declared by the exchange in advance.[4]

CSE indices

The C25 Index, a weighted, market value index comprising 20 Danish blue chips, launched for futures and options trading (members include the A.P. Moller-Maersk Group). The KFX Index comprises growth companies in the medical, telecommunications, biotechnology, and information technology sectors on the exchanges KVX Growth Market. The KAX Index is the exchange's all-share index, introduced in 2001 to replace the previous all-share index. It conforms to the Global Industry Classification Standard developed by Morgan Stanley Dean Witter and Standard & Poor's.

gollark: Business idea; convert coloring books to ebooks for more convenient use.
gollark: And has implementations.
gollark: XMPP is neat too.
gollark: Though it would probably be successful if marketed to, say, teachers.
gollark: The main problem I can see is that you would have to give up some of your forward visual range to see backward.

References

  1. "About us". Nasdaq. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  2. "Børsens historie". Børsbygningen (in Danish). Dansk Erhverv. Retrieved 11 August 2016.
  3. Bakie, John (30 October 2014). "Nasdaq drops OMX name from branding". The Trade. London. Archived from the original on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 12 June 2015.
  4. Market Hours, OMX Nordic Exchange - Copenhagen via Wikinvest

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