The Economic History Review

Early inventory management practices in the foreign exchange market: Insights from sixteenth-century Lyon

Volume 75 Issue 3
Home > The Economic History Review > Early inventory management practices in the foreign exchange market: Insights from sixteenth-century Lyon
Pages: 739-778Authors: Nadia Matringe
Published online: October 17, 2021DOI: 10.1111/ehr.13112

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Studies of the early modern exchange market have usually focused on the strategies of traders who made profits from differences in exchange rates. This article instead focuses on the inventory management practices of exchange dealers, who traded almost exclusively on behalf of third parties while acting as market makers in the Lyon fairs in the sixteenth century. Using evidence from 1 937 transactions performed by one of the major Lyon banks (Salviati), it uncovers a specific rebalancing technique based on the use of the bill of exchange as a netting instrument. Thanks to a system of limit orders, the Lyon exchange dealers were able to offset order flows, thus minimizing their credit risk while remaining exposed to reputational risk. Such a rebalancing mechanism involved multiple clients and markets and contributed to the clearing of international payments once bills reached maturity. Double-entry bookkeeping both facilitated and limited the use of the bill of exchange as a multilateral netting instrument.

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