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Bolsa de Valores de la República Dominicana (Stock Market of the Dominican Republic, BVRD) is the only stock exchange in the Dominican Republic, basically performing a transaction regulation function. It began operations in 1991 and is viewed as a cornerstone of the country's integration into the global economy and domestic development.
The Índice de Precios y Cotizaciones (IPC) is the weighted measurement index of 35 stocks traded on the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores. The recomposition of the index has its methodology originating and exposing on the BMV, and may change every quarter.
The Institutional Stock Exchange (Spanish: Bolsa Institucional de Valores), commonly known as BIVA, is Mexico's second stock exchange, based in Mexico City.BIVA began operations on 25 July 2018 and trades the same instruments as the other exchange in Mexico, the Bolsa Mexicana de Valores: equities, debts, warrants and some Mexican-specific instruments such as CKDs and FIBRAs.
The Mexican Stock Exchange (Spanish: Bolsa Mexicana de Valores), commonly known as Mexican Bolsa, Mexbol, or BMV, is one of two stock exchanges in Mexico, the other being BIVA - Bolsa Institucional de Valores. [4] It is the second largest stock exchange in Latin America, only after São Paulo based B3 in Brazil.
Bolsa de Valores de Asunción: Asunción: 1977 BVA: Peru: Lima Stock Exchange Lima: 1860 BVL: Suriname: Suriname Stock Exchange: Paramaribo: 1994 SSE: Uruguay: Bolsa de Valores de Montevideo: Montevideo: 1867 BVM: Bolsa Electronica de Valores de Uruguay: Montevideo: 1993 BEVSA: Venezuela: Bolsa de Valores de Caracas: Caracas: 1947 BVC Archived ...
The Salvadoran Stock Exchange (Spanish: Bolsa de Valores de El Salvador, BVES) is the stock exchange in the nation of El Salvador. [1] The exchange is used for the securitization of various government infrastructure projects. It is overseen by Central Securities Depository (CEDEVAL). Rolando Duarte is the President, and Valentín Arrieta is the ...
The Colombia Securities Exchange (Spanish: Bolsa de Valores de Colombia, bvc) is a stock exchange which was created as a result of merging three independent stock exchanges: Bogotá (Bolsa de Bogotá, 1928), Medellín (Bolsa de Medellín, 1961) and Occidente (Bolsa de Occidente, Cali, 1983).
Bolsa de Valores de Nicaragua is supervised by the Superintendencia de Bancos y Otras Instituciones Financieras (Supervision of Banks and Other Financial Institutions). [2] This institution supervises trading activity, market positions, as well as stock brokers, banks, insurance companies and issuers of securities .