Home

beurzenmarkt

Beurzenmarkt is a Dutch term that refers to the market where beurzen (stock exchanges) operate and where securities are traded. In practice, it is often used to describe the stock market of Dutch-speaking regions, and more broadly the European stock market system as a whole.

The beurzenmarkt encompasses organized stock exchanges, where shares, bonds, and derivatives are listed and traded, as

Beurzen are typically regulated by national authorities and integrated within the European framework (MiFID II). Exchanges

The term beurzen has roots in early Dutch mercantile exchange traditions, with the Beurs van Amsterdam established

For further information, see stock exchange, Euronext, AFM, FSMA, and MiFID II.

well
as
broker-dealers
and
institutional
investors.
Trades
are
executed
on
electronic
systems
or,
historically,
on
trading
floors.
Liquidity,
price
discovery,
and
capital
formation
are
central
functions.
operate
trading
venues,
listing
rules,
market
surveillance,
clearing,
and
settlement.
In
the
Netherlands
and
Belgium,
major
components
include
Euronext
Amsterdam
and
Euronext
Brussels
(part
of
the
Euronext
group),
along
with
Paris.
The
Netherlands
Authority
for
the
Financial
Markets
(AFM)
oversees
market
conduct
domestically,
while
FSMA
covers
Belgium;
across
the
EU,
ESMA
coordinates
regulation.
in
the
17th
century.
Today
the
reference
to
a
beurzenmarkt
is
used
less
often;
people
more
commonly
speak
of
the
beurs
or
the
aandelenmarkt.
The
European
exchange
landscape
has
seen
consolidation,
and
Euronext
now
operates
major
national
beurzen
including
Amsterdam,
Brussels,
and
Paris.