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10 - Domestic finance, 1860–1914

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

Roderick Floud
Affiliation:
London Metropolitan University
Paul Johnson
Affiliation:
London School of Economics and Political Science
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Summary

AN IMPERFECT FINANCIAL MARKET?

At the opening of the twentieth century (Joseph 1911), it was implied that the financial sector had the face of Janus, a characterisation many historians have subsequently adopted and further developed. While the markets facilitated a mounting volume of foreign borrowing from the mid-1850s, domestic clients were, it has repeatedly been maintained, increasingly ill served, to the detriment of investment at home (see also chapter 8 above).

The charge laid against financial institutions largely relates to industrial finance (Saville 1961), and to the argument that an imperfect capital market primarily directed savings into overseas securities. These yielded less than 5 per cent immediately prior to the First World War, while total capital invested at home returned more than 10 per cent. This comparison, however, greatly overstates the apparent illogical bias in the financial sector’s workings, since much overseas investment comprised publicly marketed and fixed-interest bonds whereas a significant proportion of domestic returns was generated by privately held unsecuritised equity (McCloskey 1970: 451–5). When analogous domestic and overseas financial assets are compared, foreign securities either carried only somewhat higher coupons or distributed slightly greater dividends, reflecting the rather bigger risks that their ownership entailed (Cairncross 1953: 227–31); these risk and return relationships were confirmed by Edelstein (1976). He also found that, although returns on both home and overseas publicly issued securities fell secularly as their respective marketed volumes increased, during periods of domestic boom such as the mid-1890s, the small differential favouring foreign stocks diminished. However, when overseas investment began to mount again – as from 1897 – the ‘risk premium’ on comparable foreign securities once more increased.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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References

Collins, M. 1995. Banks and Industrial Finance in Britain, 1800–1939. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Michie, R. C. 1992. The City of London: Continuity and Change, 1850–1990.CrossRef
Wilson, J. F. 1995. British Business History, 1720–1994. Manchester.Google Scholar

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