Online Encyclopedia

ARBITRAGE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 324 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ARBITRAGE  , the

See also:
term applied to the
See also:
system of equalizing prices in different commercial centres by buying in the cheaper market and selling in the dearer . These transactions, or theirconverse, are mainly confined to
See also:
stocks and shares,
See also:
foreign exchanges and
See also:
bullion; and are for the most
See also:
part carried on between
See also:
London and other
See also:
European capitals and largely with New York . When prices in London are affected by
See also:
financial or
See also:
political causes, all other markets are sooner or later influenced, as London is the banking and financial centre for the commerce of the
See also:
world . It may, however, also occur that some
See also:
local event of importance initiates a rise or fall in a particular market which must ultimately affect other countries . For instance, a crisis in France would immediately depress all French securities, and by exciting the fears of capitalists would stimulate transfers of funds and raise all the exchanges against France . In ordinary times those engaged in arbitrage operate with a very small margin of profit . The
See also:
great improvement in postal, telegraphic and telephonic communication enables operators to close transactions with amazing rapidity, while competition reduces the margin of profit to a minimum . Operations in
See also:
American stocks and shares are carried on between London and New York on a vast scale, while transactions in
See also:
African
See also:
mining shares are undertaken to a considerable extent between London and Paris . The frequent fluctuations in the prices of the latter securities offer a large and fruitful field to bold operators possessed of large resources, while those who have small means often succumb in a commercial crisis . As regards foreign
See also:
exchange and bullion, arbitrage operators stand on a fairly safe foundation, the fluctuations being slight and involving little or no
See also:
risk, although they yield a very small margin of profit . Arbitrage operations are for these reasons resorted to frequently by one country in supplying the requirements of another . The slightest
See also:
advantage in any market is put to profit, and as the margin in ordinary exchange transactions is minute, the ability to operate in this
See also:
cross fashion renders business possible, which would otherwise be impracticable .

To give

concrete instances of the working of arbitrage the following may be cited: On the 21st of May 1906 the exchange on London in Vienna was telegraphed from that city 24 kronen 44 cents; London, requiring to
See also:
purchase remittances, found that Antwerp had some Vienna to sell, and arranged to buy there . The transactions worked out as follows:—The
See also:
direct exchange in Antwerp on London being 25.2s1, and Antwerp's selling price of Vienna being toy francs for loo kronen, on dividing 25.251- by 105 an exchange of 24•os1 was obtained or 1 cent cheaper than the direct exchange between Vienna and London . Again a portion of the proceeds of the
See also:
Russian loan of 1906 had to be remitted to Berlin from Paris . Having exhausted local balances in Berlin, Paris on one side, and Berlin on the other, sought to prevent gold shipments from Berlin, and thus cause stringency in that
See also:
money market . On the 21st of May 1906 Berlin was therefore seeking to sell Paris in London at 81.35 marks for too francs, and draw on London for the proceeds at 20.50 . This transaction produced a parity between the exchanges of 25.20, which
See also:
left a small margin in London . Two instances of arbitrage of stocks are the following:—On the 24th of March 1906,
See also:
Japanese
See also:
exchequer bonds, series 2 and 3, were bought in Tokio at 931 and were paid for by telegraphic transfer at 24* pence per yen, and were sold in London the same day at 94 for payment on arrival of bonds . It took five weeks for the transmission of the bonds to London, where they were dealt in on the fixed basis of exchange, namely 241 pence per yen . The London price
See also:
works out thus: 93.25 X 24.375 Tokio five weeks later . The following is a computation of the transaction: London price . 92.77 Five weeks at 5 % .45
See also:
English stamp %, on nominal amount 50 Insurances % •I2 93.84 24.50 =92'77, to which must be added the loss of
See also:
interest, as the
See also:
firm in London paid
See also:
cash on the 24th of March for the telegraphic transfer, and did not recover payment until the arrival of the bonds from This sum represents the
See also:
net cost to the arbitrage house in London, and the money paid on the 28th of
See also:
April left a profit of about 3a % . The bonds being " to
See also:
bearer "
See also:
insurance was necessary for the safety in this, as in all similar transactions .

In the next example, however, this expense was unnecessary, the bonds being " inscribed." On the 21st of May 1906 American

Steel
See also:
common shares were sold for cash in New York at 41 dollars per share, and were bought in London at 42- for the account day, May 31St . These figures are explained by the fact that transactions in the
See also:
United States stocks and shares are on the fixed basis of five dollars per pound sterling, while as regards payments in New York the exchange varies daily .
See also:
Rail-way shares are generally roo dollars each . In the London market, however, five shares of
See also:
ioo dollars would be £ioo nominal . These shares, therefore, cost in London, at the purchase price of 42 h, £42: 4: 5 . The money realized in New York for five shares at 41138 was 205.93 dollars . A cheque on London was bought at 4 dollars 854 cents, realizing X42 : 8 : 9 . It should be noted that the shares in these cases are generally lent by the New York correspondent, thus saving loss of interest . The resulting profit in this particular instance was 4S . 4d. for each five shares, divided between the London and New York arbitrage firms . Arbitrage operations with distant countries such as India are large and mainly profitable . Arbitrage with India consists cl}fefly in buying bills of exchange in London, such as India Council rupee bills amounting to about 16 millions sterling annually, and commercial bills
See also:
drawn against goods exported to India .

The

See also:
counter-operation consists in purchasing in India, for short or long delivery, sterling bills drawn against exports to Great Britain of
See also:
Indian produce, such as cotton, tea, indigo, jute and wheat . These operations greatly facilitate trade and the moving of produce from the interior of India to the seaports . Without this assistance Great Britain's enormous trade could not be carried on, and she would have to revert to the
See also:
primitive system of barter . The same advantages are afforded to her vast trade with
See also:
China and
See also:
Japan, with the material difference that the supply of government council bills is confined to the Indian trade . The balance of trade with all countries is generally settled by specie shipments; hence, with the Far East,
See also:
silver and gold
See also:
play an important part in arbitrage . It will thus be seen that arbitrage fills a useful place in commerce; the profits are small because the competition is great; nevertheless huge transactions employing thousands of clerks result from this system . The literature of the subject is extremely meagre . Lord Goschen's Theory of Foreign Exchanges(London,1866) is general and theoretical, but throws great
See also:
light upon particular aspects of the philosophy of arbitrage, without touching specially on the details of the subject itself . The
See also:
principal other works are: Kelly's Cambist (1811, 1835) ;
See also:
Otto Swoboda, Die kaufmannische Arbitrage (Berlin, 1873), and Borse and Actien (Cologne, 1869) ; Coquelin et Guillaumin, Dictionnaire de l'economie politique (Paris, 1851–1853) ; Ottomar Haupt, London Arbitrageur (London, 1870) ; Charles le Touze, Trade theorique et pratigue du change (Paris, 1868) ; Tate,
See also:
Modern Cambist (London, 1868) ; Simon Spitzer, Ueber Miinz- and Arbitragenrechnung (Vienna, 1872) ; J . W . Gilbart, Principles and Practice of Banking (London, 1871); G . Clare, The A B C of Foreign Exchanges (2nd ed., 1895) ; Money Market Primer and Key to the Exchanges (2nd ed., 1900) ; J .

Pallain,

See also:
Les Changes strangers et les prix (Paris, 1905) .

End of Article: ARBITRAGE
[back]
EDWARD ARBER (1836– )
[next]
ARBITRATION (Lat. arbitrari, to examine or judge)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.