Elements of Foreign Exchange

By Gamesnet Wednesday, August 1, 2012 0 comments

A FOREIGN EXCHANGE PRIMER

By FRANKLIN ESCHER
Special Lecturer on Foreign Exchange at New York University

Fifth Edition

NEW YORK
THE BANKERS PUBLISHING COMPANY
1915
LONDON
EFFINGHAM WILSON, 54 THREADNEEDLE ST.
Copyright 1910
By the Bankers Publishing Co.
New York

CONTENTS
 
 
PAGE
Chapter I.
What Foreign Exchange is and What Brings it into Existence
3
The various forms of obligation between the bankers and merchants of one country and the bankers and merchants of another, which result in the drawing of bills of exchange.
 
Chapter II.
The Demand for Bills of Exchange
A discussion of the six sources from which spring the demand for the various kinds of bills of exchange.
 
Chapter III.
The Rise and Fall of Exchange Rates
Operation of the five main influences tending to make exchange rise as opposed to the five main influences tending to make
 
Chapter IV.
The Various Kinds of Exchange
A detailed description of: Commercial "Long" Bills—‌Clean Bills—‌Commercial "Short" Bills—‌Drafts drawn against securities sold abroad—‌Bankers' demand drafts—‌Bankers' "long" drafts.
 
Chapter V.
The Foreign Exchange Market
How the exchange market is constituted. The bankers, dealers and brokers who make it up. How exchange rates are established. The relative importance of different kinds of exchange.
 
Chapter VI.
How Money Is Made in Foreign Exchange. The Operations of the Foreign Department
An intimate description of: Selling demand bills against remittances of demand bills—‌Selling cables against remittances of demand bills—‌Selling demand drafts against remittances of "long" exchange—‌The operation of lending foreign money here—‌The drawing of finance bills—‌Arbitraging in Foreign Exchange—‌Dealing in exchange "futures."
 
Chapter VII.
Gold Exports and Imports
The primary movement of gold from the mines to the markets, and its subsequent distribution along the lines of favorable exchange rates. Description (with presentation of actual figures) of: The export of gold bars from New York to London—‌Import of gold bars from London—‌Export of gold bars to Paris under the "triangular operation." Shipments to Argentina.
 
London as a "free" gold market and the ability of the Central Banks in Europe to control the movement of gold.
 
Chapter VIII.
Foreign Exchange in its Relation to International Security Trading
Europe's "fixed" and "floating" investment in American bonds and stocks a constant source of international security trading. Consequent foreign exchange business. Financing foreign speculation in "Americans." Description of the various kinds of bond and stock "arbitrage."
 
Chapter IX.
The Financing of Exports and Imports
A complete description of the international banking system by which merchandise is imported into and exported from the United States. An actual operation followed through its successive steps.


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