Monday, November 24, 2014

Fohlin's "Brief History of Investment Banking"

Caroline Fohlin, Johns Hopkins University Economics, has posted A Brief History of Investment Banking from Medieval Times to the Present.  Here is the abstract:    
Investment banking taken generally to mean the financing of long-term capital needs, came into being with the merchants of medieval trade routes. In almost all developed economies of the world, even those developing late in the 19th century, investment bankers emerged from merchant roots. The provision of investment banking services has come from a variety of institutions over time and across countries. Products and services have evolved to include complex, often derivative, securities; and the legal regulation of investment banking has often changed abruptly, particularly in the last 100 years. Thus, even well-known investment banking names that have endured over the centuries bear little resemblance to their ancestors.