A device for scrolling real-time data, like stock market prices.
An electronic display showing prices at which each successive trade is executed on a stock exchange, the trading volume and the share symbols. See Ticker Symbol.
Used in the context of general equities. Computerized device that relays to investors around the word the stock symbol and the latest price and volume on securities as they are traded.
Service which provides quote and volume information for each transaction on the major exchanges. also called tape. see also consolidated tape, composite tape, reading the tape.
The narrow, continuous rolls of paper on which stock transactions were recorded before electronic technology made the old recording system obsolete. The term now refers to the flow of prices appearing on tickers out of brokerage firms. (See also Ticker.)
a continuous thin ribbon of paper on which stock quotes are written
paper strip on which a telegraphic stock ticker prints
Each time a stock is bought and sold, it is displayed on an electronic ticker tape. It is a record of current trading activity on an exchange.
System that produces a running report of trading activity on the stock exchanges.
Before computers, stock prices were telegraphed around the country onto a piece of paper tape. It still exists electronically, and is just known as The Tape.
A trade by trade report in chronological order of trades executed. Separate tapes exist for various markets.
this is the consolidated tape that reports up to the minute trading information about all securities traded on all US market centers.
Telegraphic system that displays security transactions within a minute after it occurred. Commonly called the "tape", it provides the trade's last sale price and volume.
A computerized device that relays financial information to investors around the world, including the stock symbol, the latest price, and volume on securities as they are traded.
Ticker tape was used by ticker tape machines, the Ticker tape timer, stock ticker machines, or just stock tickers. Invented in the 1870s, early versions of stock tickers provided the first mechanical means of conveying stock prices ("quotes"), over a long distance over telegraph wiring. Previously, they were hand-delivered via written or messages.