A century and a half since the neem tree

A century and a half since the neem tree

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Outside the stately Calcutta Stock Exchange (CSE) at 7 Lyons Range, row after row of closely packed, ramshackle cubicles buzz with activity. Hundreds of operators, all clad in white dhoti-kurtas, sit on gaddi mats, each frantically calling out numbers and talking on several phones at once. What takes place along this narrow street is just as important as what happens inside the CSE building, as these brokers are as knowledgeable as any about market trends and moves made by large companies. Even the reality of a burgeoning culture of online trading has not cut into this flourishing trading, which has long been a part of the CSE's distinct identity and history.

Share trading in colonial Calcutta actually began seven decades before the establishment of the CSE. Already by the late 1850s, share traders had begun trading under a neem tree in the area then known as New China Bazaar. Transactions could not continue for long under the now-historic neem, however, as the tree itself was felled by Chartered Bank, which set up its building there in 1905. Soon thereafter, the CSE was formally established in 1908, thus becoming one of the oldest stock exchanges in Asia.

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