In 1878, one of Britain's largest banks, the City of Glasgow Bank, collapsed, leaving a huge deficit between its assets and liabilities. As this bank, similar to many other contemporary British banks, had unlimited liability, its failure was accompanied by the bankruptcy of the vast majority of its stockholders. It is generally believed that the collapse of this depository institution revealed the extent to which ownership in large joint-stock banks had been diffused to investors of very modest means. It is also believed that the failure resulted in bank shareholders dumping their shares unto the market. Our evidence, garnered from ownership records, trading data, and stock prices, offers no support for these widely held beliefs
Whilst in some financial systems in the early twentieth century commercial and investment banking ac...
D eposit insurance was created, at least in part, to prevent unfoundedbank failures caused by contag...
This chapter explores the regulation of banks in nineteenth-century Britain. But rather than focusin...
In 1878, one of Britain's largest banks, the City of Glasgow Bank, collapsed, leaving a huge deficit...
The superiority of the corporation over other organisational forms is typically attributed to the fa...
The superiority of the corporation over other organizational forms is typically attributed to the fa...
• City of Glasgow Bank was the largest commercial banking failure in the United Kingdom prior to th...
The recent financial turmoil highlights the incentive of highly leveraged financial institutions to ...
International audienceThe collapse of Overend Gurney and the ensuing crisis of 1866 was a turning po...
For three quarters of a century-between, roughly, the Civil War and the Great Depression-shareholder...
The widely-held, but empirically unsubstantiated, view is that the main advantage of limited liabili...
As a result of legislation in 1855, 1856 and 1862 that effectively enabled limited liability compani...
Too Big to Fail? The Newfoundland Bank Crash of 1894In the Newfoundland Bank Crash of 1894, the comm...
Earlier reports of the death of the moral economy in nineteenth-century Britain have been greatly ex...
In a recent article, we presented a historical analysis of the regime of double liability for bank s...
Whilst in some financial systems in the early twentieth century commercial and investment banking ac...
D eposit insurance was created, at least in part, to prevent unfoundedbank failures caused by contag...
This chapter explores the regulation of banks in nineteenth-century Britain. But rather than focusin...
In 1878, one of Britain's largest banks, the City of Glasgow Bank, collapsed, leaving a huge deficit...
The superiority of the corporation over other organisational forms is typically attributed to the fa...
The superiority of the corporation over other organizational forms is typically attributed to the fa...
• City of Glasgow Bank was the largest commercial banking failure in the United Kingdom prior to th...
The recent financial turmoil highlights the incentive of highly leveraged financial institutions to ...
International audienceThe collapse of Overend Gurney and the ensuing crisis of 1866 was a turning po...
For three quarters of a century-between, roughly, the Civil War and the Great Depression-shareholder...
The widely-held, but empirically unsubstantiated, view is that the main advantage of limited liabili...
As a result of legislation in 1855, 1856 and 1862 that effectively enabled limited liability compani...
Too Big to Fail? The Newfoundland Bank Crash of 1894In the Newfoundland Bank Crash of 1894, the comm...
Earlier reports of the death of the moral economy in nineteenth-century Britain have been greatly ex...
In a recent article, we presented a historical analysis of the regime of double liability for bank s...
Whilst in some financial systems in the early twentieth century commercial and investment banking ac...
D eposit insurance was created, at least in part, to prevent unfoundedbank failures caused by contag...
This chapter explores the regulation of banks in nineteenth-century Britain. But rather than focusin...