May Day investment & finance definition
- In the
United States, May 1, 1975, the day when fixed minimum brokerage commissions
ended and brokers were free to set their own commission rates. Discount
brokerage firms developed as a result. The end of fixed brokerage commissions
planted the seeds for conflicts of interest between research analysts and
investment bankers. Without inflated brokerage commissions to pay the salaries
and bonuses of research analysts, they soon began to work more closely with
investment bankers. By the time of the stock market boom in the late 1990s,
research analysts in many instances were actively involved in helping the
bankers at a firm take companies public in what was a crumbling of the so-called
“Chinese Wall” that was supposed to separate the two departments.
- In Europe,
May 1 is International Workers’ Day, which commemorates the struggle of working
people to obtain decent working conditions and fair pay. It is celebrated
throughout the world with the notable exception of the United States and
Canada.
See May Day in Wall Street Words
A widely used reference to May 1, 1975, the date on which brokerage commissions on securities became negotiable. May Day ushered in discount brokerage firms that charge investors reduced fees.
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