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exchanges

An exchange is a regulated marketplace where buyers and sellers trade standardized financial instruments or assets under a common set of rules. Exchanges provide venues for price discovery, liquidity, and transparent trade execution across products such as equities, bonds, commodities, derivatives, and, in many markets, digital assets.

Most traditional exchanges are electronic today and may also maintain a physical trading floor in some cases.

Beyond trading, exchanges often administer listing standards for issuers, supervise market activity to deter manipulation, and

Participants include retail and institutional traders, brokers, market makers, and liquidity providers. Access to exchanges is

Major traditional exchanges include the New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, London Stock Exchange, and Tokyo Stock

They
use
an
order
book
and
a
matching
engine
to
pair
buy
and
sell
orders,
producing
trades
at
mutually
agreed
prices.
Trades
are
executed
at
the
best
available
prices
according
to
the
exchange’s
rules,
with
outcomes
visible
to
participants
on
real-time
data
feeds.
provide
clearing
and
settlement
services
through
affiliated
entities.
Settlement
cycles
vary
by
instrument
and
jurisdiction
(for
example,
T+2
is
common
for
many
equities).
Exchanges
also
regulate
market
conduct,
surveillance,
and
disclosure
to
maintain
market
integrity.
typically
via
member
firms
or
approved
brokers,
with
varying
levels
of
market
access
and
compliance
obligations.
Exchange,
as
well
as
derivatives
and
commodity
exchanges
such
as
CME
Group.
In
digital
asset
markets,
centralized
cryptocurrency
exchanges
and
decentralized
exchanges
offer
similar
functions
for
trading
tokens
and
coins,
with
differing
custody,
liquidity,
and
security
models.