The following TSE-listed companies have been paying dividends for over 100 years:
- Courtesy of John Manna
The following TSE-listed companies have been paying dividends for over 100 years:
- Courtesy of John Manna
 In this picture: Ted England, Dave Luke, Peter Paulson, Bob Dunbar, Scott Zeufelt,Peter Morrison, Stevie Welch, Carl Christie, Peter, Clarence Hunter, John Newell, Gary
In this picture: Ted England, Dave Luke, Peter Paulson, Bob Dunbar, Scott Zeufelt,Peter Morrison, Stevie Welch, Carl Christie, Peter, Clarence Hunter, John Newell, GaryDuring my 30+ years at the TSX (I started very early in life!), I have witnessed several momentous market events and changes at the Exchange. The most memorable was the Black Monday Crash in October 1987.
 I began working at the TSE in July 1985 as an input operator/post clerk on Post 8. My intention had been to work for a year before “going back to school”. Well, as with many of us in this business, “back to school” never materialized !! The opportunities for advancement and pay increase were pretty good for a 20 year old kid, and by 1990 I had become a Post Supervisor. In March 1990 I left the TSE to pursue a career in music, which didn’t pay the bills very well, and I came back to the TSE in 1993, and have remained ever since.
I began working at the TSE in July 1985 as an input operator/post clerk on Post 8. My intention had been to work for a year before “going back to school”. Well, as with many of us in this business, “back to school” never materialized !! The opportunities for advancement and pay increase were pretty good for a 20 year old kid, and by 1990 I had become a Post Supervisor. In March 1990 I left the TSE to pursue a career in music, which didn’t pay the bills very well, and I came back to the TSE in 1993, and have remained ever since. Who are those people from Trading Services?
Who are those people from Trading Services? 5:00 wake up early... must add highlights to hair
5:00 wake up early... must add highlights to hair Picture 1
Picture 1 Picture 3
Picture 3 On September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S. shook the entire trading community to its core. Traders watched with horror as events started to unfold between 9:00 and 9:15 am. Everyone was stunned from the fact that what initially appeared to be an accident soon became an apparent sinister attack.
On September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the U.S. shook the entire trading community to its core. Traders watched with horror as events started to unfold between 9:00 and 9:15 am. Everyone was stunned from the fact that what initially appeared to be an accident soon became an apparent sinister attack. In the winter of 1970, my dad, a career stockbroker, took me on a tour of the Toronto Stock Exchange, then housed in a fabulous art deco building just south of King on Bay Street. Hundreds of men in close circumstances were yelling, chanting a strange mantra of acronyms, numbers and fractions. I don't remember much else, except that we walked from the public gallery down to the floor of the exchange, where I witnessed a trade. Twenty-seven years later, I walked onto the trading floor again as the significant of that previous moment was about to fade forever. On April 18, after nearly 145 years, the TSE fell silent for the last time, passing quietly into cyberspace.In a business wherein it was considered something of an innovation to provide paper receipts for buyers and sellers of stock, this final step into the ether represents a literal dehumanizing of the marketplace. On my recent visit, I made my way over to one of the three remaining trading posts to meet Jimmy and Matt Taugher, a father-and-son team with a combined sixty-odd years of experience as floor traders. Father Jimmy had been on the floor for forty-four years.
In the winter of 1970, my dad, a career stockbroker, took me on a tour of the Toronto Stock Exchange, then housed in a fabulous art deco building just south of King on Bay Street. Hundreds of men in close circumstances were yelling, chanting a strange mantra of acronyms, numbers and fractions. I don't remember much else, except that we walked from the public gallery down to the floor of the exchange, where I witnessed a trade. Twenty-seven years later, I walked onto the trading floor again as the significant of that previous moment was about to fade forever. On April 18, after nearly 145 years, the TSE fell silent for the last time, passing quietly into cyberspace.In a business wherein it was considered something of an innovation to provide paper receipts for buyers and sellers of stock, this final step into the ether represents a literal dehumanizing of the marketplace. On my recent visit, I made my way over to one of the three remaining trading posts to meet Jimmy and Matt Taugher, a father-and-son team with a combined sixty-odd years of experience as floor traders. Father Jimmy had been on the floor for forty-four years. Are the rumors true - has Fionnuala really left the TSE to have a baby?
Are the rumors true - has Fionnuala really left the TSE to have a baby? Broom Clerk wanted to remove massive amounts of paper from the floor, Mondays to Fridays. He will be required to effectively remove all papers to prepare for the next trading day, in which the floors will be covered completely in paper by the end of day.
Broom Clerk wanted to remove massive amounts of paper from the floor, Mondays to Fridays. He will be required to effectively remove all papers to prepare for the next trading day, in which the floors will be covered completely in paper by the end of day.If interested, apply below.
Some of the stuff below may be politically incorrect today - but they were a fact of life on the floor.
By John Manna