In 1250 or thereabouts, the people of Toulouse formed the Société des Moulins du Bazacle, or Bazacle Milling Company. Its 96 shares traded at a price that varied according to economic conditions and the output of the mills along the Garonne river. The firm – the forerunner to today's listed companies – remained on the official list of the Toulouse Bourse throughout the centuries until 1946. (In the 19th century it was renamed Société Civile Anonyme du Moulin du Bazacle and then Société Toulousaine d'Electricité du Bazacle.)
The Lyons Bourse was established in around 1540. Edicts dated 1572 and 1595 regulated the status of courratiers, or brokers, in the main towns and cities throughout the kingdom. A royal order issued in 1639 replaced the name courratier with agent de change for persons trading in securities and commercial bills. Paris, however, still had no organised stock exchange even though the first list of agents de change was published in 1684.
True, compared with their Northern European neighbours, the French tended to be homebodies rather than explorers, small farmers rather than industrialists, servants of the state rather than individual entrepreneurs. Despite several major business endeavours – Jacques Cœur's in the 15th century, Richelieu’s efforts in creating the Compagnie du Morbihan, des Iles, du Cap Nord, Colbert’s Compagnie Française des Indes in 1664 – French capital shied away from risk. Hampered by a lack of resources, business ventures were only moderately successful.
Between 1716 and 1720, a Scot, John Law, tried to accustomise the French to “paper money” by issuing and circulating Banque Royale bank notes and offering shares in the Compagnie des Indes, which for the first time were available in bearer form. However, Law was unprepared for France's unwieldy economic and legal system. His experiment ended in a bankruptcy, and for two generations, the French shunned bank notes and coin, letters of credit and transferable securities.
Nonetheless, efforts to organise the market continued. An order of the Royal Council of State dated 24 September 1724 authorised the creation of a stock exchange in Paris. (Under article XI, women were refused admittance under any pretext whatsoever, a measure repealed in June 1967.) Another order, dated 30 March 1774, created a special area within the Bourse called the parquet (floor). This was reserved for agents de change, who were required to shout out market prices – hence the term "open outcry".
Nevertheless, many people – including prominent citizens – were unconvinced. Mirabeau in his "Pamphlet On The Shares of Compagnie des Eaux de Paris", dismissed as "a fantasy" a plan by the Perrier brothers to issue shares to finance a water supply system for the capital. Distrust of paper money grew even stronger under the Revolution with the spread of assignats (promissory notes) and the financial collapse of the Directoire.
Besides, the revolutionary government was hostile to guilds and corporations. The agents de change corporation was disbanded in 1791, and trading was done without intermediaries.
In the turmoil of 1793, the Bourse was closed and joint-stock companies were abolished. On 9 September 1795, the Bourse was closed ‘permanently’ – only to re-open on 20 October with 24 agents de change.
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