Rio de Janeiro Stock Exchange explained

Rio de Janeiro Stock Exchange
Nativename:Bolsa de Valores do Rio de Janeiro
Type:Stock exchange
City:Rio de Janeiro
Country:Brazil
Founded:1820
Owner:Bolsa do Rio Stock Group
Currency:BRL
Mcap:USD 1 billion (2007-08)
Indexes:SIXBEX and TCAT
Homepage:www.bvrj.com.br

The Rio de Janeiro Stock Exchange (Bolsa de Valores do Rio de Janeiro, or BVRJ) was Brazil's second largest exchange (after the Bovespa stock exchange in São Paulo), and was amongst the oldest of Brazilian stock exchanges. Its inauguration occurred on July 14, 1820, 3 years after the 1st Brazilian stock exchange inaugurated, the today inactive Salvador Exchange;[1] and before the Brazilian Independence process began.

It was from its beginning through the early 1970s, the most important Brazilian Exchange. Following the 1971 markets crash's effects it slowly lost ground to São Paulo's Bovespa. After a national stock markets crash in 1989, BVRJ lost the rank of main stock exchange in Latin America to São Paulo's Exchange. Since, BVRJ traded in government bonds and currencies on the electronic Sisbex system, with the trading hours being from 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.

It was sold on April 11, 2002 to BM&F,[2] which merged with Bovespa. It is now called the BM&FBovespa.

External links

See also

Notes and References

  1. Marta Barcellos & Simone Azevedo; "Histórias do Mercado de Capitais no Brasil" ("Financial Markets' Histories in Brazil") Campus Elsevier 2011 Intro. Page xiv, Last Paragraph.
  2. https://web.archive.org/web/20121105072021/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-84710213.html source