A History of the London
Stock Market 1945-2009
By
George G. Blakey
A
book review by Richard Gill of the AIM & PLUS
Newsletter
A History of the London
Stock Exchange by George G. Blakey can be
purchased for GBP 39.99 by clicking
here.
A
History of the London Stock Market 1945-2009 is
the latest edition of George G. Blakey's
detailed and lively review of the world's most
famous and important equity exchange. Blakey is
well versed in the subject matter, having
written the previous volumes, as well as having
worked for many years as a stockbroker and
financial analyst.
The
first thing which struck me about this book was
its sheer size. Weighing in at over 550 pages
this is not a tome which can be finished in one
sitting. And readers should be aware that there
is a heavy focus on more recent stock market
history. The years from 1945 to 1965 receive
only little attention, while the events of 2008
and 2009 alone make up around a fifth of the
content. In that vein, owners of the previous
edition, which omits the turbulent events of
2007-2009, will get a lot of new content by
purchasing the latest offering.
In
the introduction Blakey sets the scene of
what's to come by preluding the book with a
brief overview of stock market events during
the years of World War II. Following that each
chapter, most of which are divided into
individual years, cover over 60 years of stock
market history, with the major events of each
period, the winning firms, the losers, relevant
economic and political events all discussed in
depth. Each section begins with a useful chart
of how the FTSE 100 (or FT 30 from 1966 to 1984
and FT Ordinary Index before that) performed
during the period, with individual paragraphs
clearly labelled with the main events of the
year. Along the way Blakey gives a sense of the
major changes occurring in the markets, both
from a macroeconomic perspective and down to
company and individual levels.
My
favourite element of the book is how Blakey
described some of the most famous stock market
disasters. Who could forget the technology boom
of the early 21st century where investors were
willing to pay ludicrous sums for firms with no
more than a website and a couple of IT
graduates on the board. And the individual
company calamities also make for entertaining
reading: the rise and fall of Polly Peck and
the horrific debt fuelled acquisition strategy
which brought down Marconi for example. These
stories are useful in that they give investors
important information on how to spot the next
stock market bubble or disastrous
investment.
To
make this book perfect a brief history of the
early days of the stock exchange, from its
formation in the 17th century coffee houses,
through to the South Sea Bubble, could have
been covered - although for reasons of space I
recognise that this is probably not possible.
In the words of investment legend Jim Slater,
"...in the absence of a crystal ball, a
history book is the next best thing." A
History of the London Stock Market 1945-2009
should be any investor's history book of
choice.
A History of the London
Stock Exchange by George G. Blakey can be
purchased for GBP 39.99 by clicking
here.
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