Introduction
When it comes to social and cultural histories of capitalism, a lot more is known about how people spent their money than how they invested it.Footnote 1 The institutions and practices of nineteenth-century consumer society—the department stores, the development of the advertising industry, the democratization of luxury—have been thoroughly mapped out by scholars since the 1990s.Footnote 2 Yet while spending and investing are easily imagined as opposites—one representing the indulgence of gratification, the other its deferral—a culture of investment was developing in late Victorian Britain that appealed to similar desires and emotions as were played upon by consumer capitalism. In the same way that advertisers, manufacturers, and retailers were creating mass markets for consumer goods, so other actors were using innovative methods to appeal to small investors, widening participation in financial markets.
This culture has been obscured by a focus on the London Stock Exchange. Though becoming the center not only of the national but also the international securities market, the London Stock Exchange was distinguished by its “neglect of the small investor.”Footnote 3 Its stockbrokers preferred larger clients: they were more likely to pay their debts, required less attention, and were more lucrative than smaller clients, since the broker’s main income derived from a percentage commission on each transaction. Thus, they did not advertise—indeed the rules of the London Stock Exchange forbade it—but acquired new business through personal introductions from existing clients. Provincial stock exchanges tended to follow this lead, also imposing advertising bans on members, limiting their ability to reach new investors. This conservatism imposed limits on the “democratization” of stock ownership.Footnote 4
Yet, by looking beyond the official market, a different picture is glimpsed. The enclosure of the London Stock Exchange at the beginning of the nineteenth century created a distinction between “inside” and “outside” stockbrokers. Anyone unwilling or unable to meet the Stock Exchange’s membership requirements was free to do business outside of it.Footnote 5 The activities of these outsiders occasionally surface in histories of the London Stock Exchange, particularly at moments of conflict between members and nonmembers. By necessity, however, they feature as bit-players, peripheral to the main story of the growth of the official exchanges.Footnote 6 They have occasionally attracted more sustained attention. In a pioneering article, David Itzkowitz shows how in the late Victorian period outside brokers borrowed methods from professional bookmakers, using “aggressive advertising” and sensational appeals to introduce speculation to a wider audience.Footnote 7 Dilwyn Porter provides an equally valuable survey of the varied ways in which outsiders targeted inexperienced investors from the 1880s to the start of World War II.Footnote 8 Important though this work is, it conceptualizes outside brokers as disreputable and dishonest adjuncts to the “real” market for stocks and shares, whose main—if unintentional—impact was to legitimize the established exchanges. Porter, for example, though recognizing the diversity of outside firms and noting that some behaved honorably, focuses on the fraudulent among their number, the “parasitic enterprises” and “fringe operators” that preyed upon “the greedy, the stupid and the unworldly.”Footnote 9
Alternative approaches are possible, however. Kieran Heinemann has recently made a persuasive case for focusing on “the fringes of financial markets” as a “legitimate and vibrant entry point for investment newcomers.” He explores this theme in relation to what he calls the “grey market for stocks and shares” after World War I, in which outside brokers were prominent.Footnote 10 His analysis is complemented by an article by Matthew Hollow in this journal that documents the “share-pushing” activities of outsiders in the interwar period.Footnote 11 Though sharing Porter’s focus on fraud, he uses the activities of outsiders to map the financial advice landscape and explore how investors, particularly new investors, navigated the market. Looking more closely at market outsiders can indeed give new perspectives on how participation in the market was extended, but in this article, I suggest that the late Victorian years provide an even better vantage point from which to observe this process. This was the period that first saw the outside broker rise to prominence, with a raft of outsiders challenging the hegemony of established operators. Their continuing success into the interwar period rested largely on a refinement of practices pioneered from the late 1870s.
Itzkowitz compares outside brokers to bookmakers, but an alternative analogy can be found in the market for consumer goods. Borrowing techniques from entrepreneurial contemporaries like William Lever and Thomas Barratt, outside brokers developed a mass market, not for soap, but for speculation.Footnote 12 Though outnumbered by insiders, they leveraged their advantages to transform the market for stocks and shares. Their blanket advertising brought the stock market to the attention of new ranks of potential investors, making it a subject of curiosity. Their active branching policy moved investment out of the City of London and made it more accessible to larger numbers of people. Their information and advice services promised to demystify the markets for the masses. Outside brokers became high-profile figures whose visibility made them the public face of the stock market, despite having no official connection with the London Stock Exchange. Thus, despite their persistent association with fraudulent practices, they became hugely influential intermediaries who shaped many people’s understanding of and engagement with the market.
As others have observed, researching outside brokers poses problems.Footnote 13 Relatively few collections of stockbrokers’ papers survive in the archives, and those that exist are of inside rather than outside brokers. But a detailed picture of their activities can be pieced together from nineteenth-century newspapers and periodicals, which contain not only their advertisements but also news stories, editorial comments, advice columns, readers’ letters, and court reports involving outside brokers. Yet these materials contain pitfalls: unpicking the financial agendas influencing newspaper coverage can be difficult; legal reports, though furnishing some of the richest material on outside brokers, may not be entirely representative of their business practices. The research strategy has been to read as widely as possible across the newspaper and periodical press, encompassing the diversity of titles that reported on or carried advertisements for outside brokers, and assessing both critical and sympathetic comment. Digitization is useful for identifying relevant material, but this article also draws extensively on nondigitized titles, especially financial and specialist ones. Other sources have been used: although brokers’ circulars do not survive in large quantities, their investment manuals do, and these give important insights into their appeal to investors.Footnote 14 Finally, the records of the London Stock Exchange and the Exchange Telegraph Company contain many useful references to the activities of outsiders.
This article uses these sources to reevaluate the significance of outside brokers, exploring their methods and the reasons for their success. The first section briefly sketches the growth of the outsiders’ business and the resulting backlash from the later 1880s. The rest of the article attempts to explain why, despite a moral panic about these outsiders, they were able to thrive for so long. The second section surveys the various methods of communication used by the brokers, showing how they harnessed the power of print to reach wide constituencies of potential investors. The third focuses on how outsiders helped to recalibrate attitudes, blurring the boundaries between investment, speculation, and gambling, recasting playing the stock market as an exciting but safe and legitimate activity. The fourth explores why these methods inspired trust, and the fifth assesses the complex relationship between the inside and outside markets. The conclusion suggests the wider implications of studying financial “fringes” for understanding capitalism. Histories of the stock market tend to draw on official sources of publicly quoted securities and their holders. This work has provided a rich and quantitatively precise view of the growth of the stock market, tracing who invested and what they invested in.Footnote 15 But it does not provide the whole picture, and this article is an attempt to bring into view a hidden but important side of this market.
The Rise of the Outsiders
The market for stocks and shares was originally an open market, conducted in a variety of locations, including the Royal Exchange, the Rotunda of the Bank of England, and, most famously, the coffee houses of the City of London. Though the City Corporation possessed powers to license stockbrokers, the trade was in fact carried on by a mix of “sworn” and “unsworn” brokers.Footnote 16 Moves toward creating a closed market, culminating in the establishment of a members-only Stock Exchange in 1801, did not create a monopoly.Footnote 17 Trade continued outside “the House,” with a host of brokers, dealers, and auctioneers making up a diverse financial market. And when stock exchanges began to form in the larger towns and cities from the 1830s, the inside-outside dynamic was replicated across the country.Footnote 18
Initially attracting little attention, outsiders first gained a higher profile during the “railway mania” of the 1840s. Going by many names—“stags, outside men, third class train, or stand ups”—they specialized in buying and selling letters of allotment for railway shares, a trade that took place in the alley outside the Stock Exchange. They were considered “disreputable dealers,” and their main occupation was “plundering” small tradesmen and “other unfortunate individuals.”Footnote 19 But outsiders were mainly known for their association with the market for mining shares. Domestic mines had been neglected by the London Stock Exchange because of their distance from the capital, their unpredictability, and the difficulty of getting reliable information on them, allowing the field to be dominated by outside dealers.Footnote 20 The tendency of these dealers also to be involved in company promotion and management created conflicts of interest that gave them a dubious reputation. Accused of manipulating share prices, misrepresenting the prospects of mining ventures, and seeking to offload overpriced shares onto unwary investors, one such dealer admitted in 1853 that the public saw them as “little better than card swindlers.”Footnote 21
But from the 1870s, a growing number of ambitious outside brokers were shedding their association with the mining share market, recasting themselves as general stock and share brokers. They were encouraged by a range of factors that were beginning to make investment in stocks and shares a viable proposition for greater numbers, including the wider availability of investments with limited liability, lower share denominations, rising incomes for growing numbers of white-collar workers, and reforms to married women’s property rights.Footnote 22 Another factor was the arrival of the new technology of the “tape.” Prices of stocks were telegraphed from the London Stock Exchange to receiving machines in brokerages across London, which printed them on a spool of paper. The “ticker,” as it was sometimes known on account of the sound it made when in action, had been adopted by the New York Stock Exchange in December 1867, and started operation in London five years later, following the formation of the Exchange Telegraph Company.Footnote 23
Both inside and outside brokers subscribed to the tape service, but only outsiders realized its transformative potential, often taking on multiple machines, making them freely available to their clients, and making this a central element of their sales pitch. The continuous supply of prices represented a significant step toward the mechanization of stock dealing, increasing the speed and reliability of transactions. And it provided the raw materials for speculation. Customers would select which stock they wanted to operate in, and whether they wanted to speculate for a rise (a “bull”) or for a fall (a “bear”). They then deposited “cover,” which could be as little as 1 percent of the value of the stock, together with commission of 1/16th (6.25 percent). This meant that just £5 6s 3d “commanded” £500 stock, in the language of the brokers, while those with £21 5s to risk could “command” £2,000 stock. If a client was “bulling” a stock, and the tape price went up by 1 percent, they could close the transaction, pocketing the difference and their cover—or keep it open hoping for even bigger profits. If the stock went down by 1 percent, their cover “ran off” and the transaction ended. By the end of 1885, the Exchange Telegraph Company was supplying 140 tape machines to nonmembers.Footnote 24
But the proliferation of this type of speculation generated anxieties that threatened to overtake the outside brokers. By the mid-1880s, with close to two hundred outside firms doing business in the capital, outside brokers had become a frequent subject of hostile comment.Footnote 25 The press had long been a key reputation broker in the financial markets, and there was no shortage of voices willing to challenge the rise of the outside brokers.Footnote 26 For critics, speculation on the cover system was gambling, pure and simple. Those who did it were not actually investing in the stock market, they pointed out, but gambling on price movements. Moreover, it was a rigged gamble. Whereas inside brokers were the agents of their clients, outside brokers were effectively principals in their transactions with customers, much like bookmakers and punters. In other words, when their customers lost—when the cover ran off—they won. Therefore, they had every incentive to make sure this happened. Those who risked their money in this way “lose their money, probably, nineteen times out of twenty.”Footnote 27 When growing pressure of competition between outsiders led several of them to begin offering commission-free dealing, critics presented this as a dangerous deception designed to tempt the unwary with a veneer of fake philanthropy.Footnote 28 And while dealing with an inside broker meant having recourse to the London Stock Exchange’s Committee for General Purposes in the event of a dispute, those dealing with outsiders had no such protections.
Outside brokerages were increasingly stigmatized as “bucket-shops,” a term originating in the United States for low-class drinking houses, but which had come to be applied to brokerages competing with the Chicago Board of Trade, and which quickly made its way over the Atlantic.Footnote 29 Newspapers warned their readers against the bucket-shop menace.Footnote 30 By the early 1890s, disquiet had developed into a full-blown moral panic with calls for legislative intervention. In 1893, the recently formed National Anti-Gambling League began working with a former attorney general, Sir Richard Webster, to draw up a bill to define outside brokerages as common gaming houses and therefore illegal under the terms of the 1845 Gaming Act.Footnote 31 Though this came to nothing, outside brokers who misappropriated their clients’ money could be criminally prosecuted, and judges in both criminal and civil actions often commented in scathing terms about the business practices of the outsiders.Footnote 32
Increasingly worried about the competition they posed, as well as possible reputational damage, the London Stock Exchange took steps against the outsiders. In 1885 the Committee for General Purposes tried to block the supply of tape prices that sustained the outsiders’ business by expelling the Exchange Telegraph Company from the floor of the House. This proved ineffective, however, as the company simply set up shop just outside the Exchange, where it was able to continue sourcing prices from members as they came and went. After eighteen months, its operatives were readmitted to the House. But anxieties about competition persisted, and in 1893 the committee tried a different strategy, requiring the Exchange Telegraph Company to stop supplying prices to outside brokers.Footnote 33 But cutting off the outsiders did not curb them for long, and they continued to flourish into the 1930s. It was only legislative interference that eventually ended their operations.Footnote 34
How outside brokers were able to win and maintain trust in the face of copious press criticism, the hostility of judges, and the opposition of the London Stock Exchange requires some explanation. For contemporaries, the irrationality of the public, particularly small investors, was to blame. The Times was representative when in an 1898 editorial it wondered at the persistence of “human credulity” in the modern age. Seeing similarities between outside brokers and patent medicine vendors, the fact both were able to get rich by promising “short cuts to health and wealth” was proof of the enduring “gullibility” of the public, resistant to experience and reasoning alike.Footnote 35 Even if not sharing the condescension of such judgments, historians have perhaps not done enough to challenge their underlying assumptions, thus leaving a somewhat skewed perspective. Conceiving of outsiders as essentially fraudulent and their victims as fools creates an overly simplistic dichotomy between honest insiders and crooked outsiders that whitewashes official exchanges, obscuring some of their own problematic practices. It also fails to account for important characteristics of the information landscape in which investors operated. And, by focusing on character traits rather than states, it pays insufficient attention to important drivers of investment behavior. As scholars are increasingly insisting, framing discussions of behavior in terms of “rationality” and “irrationality” limits understanding of the contexts in which decisions were made.Footnote 36
The Power of Print
Inside brokers had an effective system for bringing in new business. They employed hosts of agents—variously called “touts,” “runners,” “remisiers,” and most frequently “half-commission men”—to win them new clients, sharing the commission with them. Well-connected young men would haunt the West End clubs, “where they ‘preyed’ on relatives, old school friends, and the like for business.”Footnote 37 Likewise, brokers split commission with banks, accountants, lawyers, and members of the provincial stock exchanges. Thus, investors could do business with an inside broker without having any direct contact with him. However extensive this system was—and one Edwardian journalist estimated that there were around twenty thousand such agents in operation—it was not sufficient to monopolize the stock and share business for the insiders.Footnote 38 Relying on personal, face-to-face relations rather than exploiting the growing power of print, there were natural limits to its reach. Those who did not encounter an agent for an inside broker were increasingly likely to discover one of the growing ranks of outside brokers who were making themselves visible through modern advertising methods.
Spurred on by the repeal of the “taxes on knowledge” between 1853 and 1861, the second half of the nineteenth century witnessed “an exponential growth in the number of places where news was read and bought.”Footnote 39 As well seeing the establishment of new titles, newspapers were now published more often, with a big increase in dailies, and they were getting cheaper, with penny papers becoming more available from the 1860s.Footnote 40 The significant increases in circulation, brought about by lower prices, also enabled newspapers to grow in size, offering more pages for the same low price. Advertising, always crucial to the economics of the press, became even more so in an age of intensifying competition and shrinking margins on sales. New titles scrabbled to win advertisers, who were thus able to leverage generous terms.Footnote 41
Though they had long used the press, outside brokers capitalized on these changes to begin advertising more consistently and more extensively from the 1850s. Often bunched together in the advertising columns, their notices represented in effect an “investors’ corner” catching the eye of anyone with money to place. Advertising brokers were also paying more attention to sales techniques, using eye-catching headlines to attract attention. Thus, a typical advertising column of The Times in May 1860 featured four successive notices, headlined “Shares Wanted,” “Profitable Investment,” “Mine Shares for Sale,” and “Safe Investment,” respectively.Footnote 42 By the 1880s, brokers’ advertisements had become more prominent still. Firms like W. Gutteridge and Co., John Shaw, and the Universal Stock Exchange were emulating the more ambitious consumer goods firms by taking whole columns, then double columns, and eventually even full-page adverts.Footnote 43 Their advertisements colonized every type of newspaper available: the London and provincial press, niche publications such as the Civil Service Gazette and the Court Journal, and, of course, the burgeoning specialist financial press.Footnote 44 In some cases, they even began publishing their own newspapers.Footnote 45 Advertising became a major element of these firms’ budgets, with George Gregory and Co.’s annual ad spend in the 1890s lying in the region of £30,000.Footnote 46 While not quite matching the most prolific advertisers such as Beecham’s, which by this point were spending around £100,000 annually, publicity was clearly as integral to their success as it was to manufacturers of pills and soaps, allowing them to reach a national market.Footnote 47
Newspapers were just one aspect of the nineteenth-century “explosion of print.”Footnote 48 Circulars had long been a means for brokers to communicate with their clients, though print runs were modest, and the circulars tended to be little more than price lists.Footnote 49 However, cheaper paper, advances in printing technology, and postal reforms rendered circulars a much more effective mass-marketing tool.Footnote 50 Circulars made up a sizable part of the astonishing 441 million book packets that were being sent annually by the end of the 1880s.Footnote 51 Though inside brokers were permitted to circularize their clients, they were not allowed to send their circulars to strangers, to prevent poaching, a rule that was rigorously enforced by the Stock Exchange’s Committee for General Purposes.Footnote 52 They were therefore prevented from employing the services of the growing number of businesses harvesting the names and addresses of shareholders from public registers to sell to firms that wanted to reach large numbers of possible investors.Footnote 53 By the early 1880s, over a dozen agencies offered these services, chief among them George Smith and Co., who charged just £1 2s 6d per thousand addressed envelopes.Footnote 54 But outside brokers could and did hire such firms, notching up huge print runs for their circulars, which evolved beyond simple price lists into more sophisticated market reports or tip-sheets. One outside firm, John Lenn and Co., by no means one of the largest, was sending out up to 50,000 circulars at a time in the mid-1880s.Footnote 55
Print could be exploited in other ways. If newspapers and circulars were relatively ephemeral methods of communication, then brokers also produced longer-lasting publications. Wanting to reach people who knew nothing about investment, many of them produced introductory guides and handbooks giving the history of the Stock Exchange, explaining the jargon of the markets, and outlining investment strategies.Footnote 56 By the 1880s, most of the larger outside firms had at least one such guide, and some were more ambitious, with George Gregory and Co. offering the public a library of no less than twenty-four publications by 1896.Footnote 57 This period even saw occasional, though significant, sorties into fiction. Both John Shaw and George Gregory coauthored fiction with the Victorian hack novelist and barrister Bracebridge Hemyng. In 1885 Hemyng published The Stockbroker’s Wife, a collection of tales of speculation “edited” by Shaw, while in 1894 he followed up with a novel, A Stock Exchange Romance, “edited” by Gregory. These productions enabled brokers to get their message across to readers who might not look at the investment ads in the newspaper, but who would happily devour a sensational tale, particularly one in which “every commandment is broken.”Footnote 58
Crucially, the visibility this advertising onslaught conferred on outsiders led many novice investors to assume that they were actually members of the London Stock Exchange.Footnote 59 This prompted the Stock Exchange’s own foray into print. From 1879 it began publishing an annual list of its members in The Times, though proposals to turn this into a weekly list were stymied by qualms about the cost.Footnote 60 But in 1885, with the outside broker threat intensifying, the Stock Exchange paradoxically began placing a regular press advertisement informing the public that its members did not advertise, and that investors could obtain a list of members on application. The advert initially appeared in the London dailies but was extended to a wider range of titles, both in London and nationally, by the end of the year.Footnote 61 This was quite a financial commitment, costing around £1,000 annually, and initially it seemed to have an effect. The secretary to the Committee for General Purposes reported in December 1886 that he was receiving an average of seven or eight letters daily as a result of the notice and had issued some 1,800 lists to inquirers.Footnote 62 It seemed that the Stock Exchange had successfully turned the outsiders’ greatest weapon—advertising—against them. But this was wishful thinking. A list, without any elaboration as to why one name rather than another should be selected, was of limited use to new investors. The secretary admitted that many inquirers asked him to recommend a broker, which he was not permitted to do. Moreover, the Stock Exchange’s restrained notice had to compete with the altogether more interesting fare provided by the outside brokers. Such a half-hearted embrace of advertising was unlikely to “attract the attention of investors and speculators,” claimed critics.Footnote 63 Even some within the Stock Exchange recognized that such “a stereotyped advertisement . . . would soon cease to attract any notice.”Footnote 64 Only one side in this contest was using print to its full potential.
Sanitizing Speculation
The outsiders’ exploitation of print conferred other advantages besides visibility. It allowed them to influence attitudes and shape debates. Historians recognize that the expansion of consumer society from the late Victorian period entailed significant cultural change alongside economic and institutional innovations. In particular, manufacturers and retailers that were developing markets for consumer goods needed to overcome entrenched cultural prejudices against credit. “Extravagant spending on luxuries,” Peter Scott explains, was “seen as the antithesis of the self-reliance and prudence which underpinned ‘respectable’ Victorian families.” Marketing campaigns therefore focused on assuaging consumers’ fears about “the perceived risks of buying on credit.”Footnote 65 Similarly, the biggest obstacle to the business of the outside brokers was deep-seated resistance to speculation, which informed much writing about the stock market. By the later nineteenth century, blanket condemnations of speculation on moral grounds had given way to a more class-inflected approach that tolerated the activity, but only among the wealthy.Footnote 66 Financial authorities typically adopted a paternalistic tone when addressing smaller investors. Francis Playford, one of the very few member-brokers to pen an advice manual, told his “inexperienced” readers to steer clear of time bargains and stick to the funds as “the safest possible investment.”Footnote 67 The financial journalist A. J. Wilson explained that those of substantial means could legitimately indulge in the “perilous luxury” of speculation because they could afford to lose, but the majority had to satisfy themselves with “carefully selected stocks of the best class,” even if this meant receiving modest returns.Footnote 68 The message that “high interest means bad security” was endlessly drummed into such readers, who were also periodically reminded of Benjamin Disraeli’s paean to the “sweet simplicity of the Three Per Cents.”Footnote 69 There was thus a world of difference, rhetorically at least, between risky speculation and steady investment.
Outside brokers sought to disrupt these distinctions. Though a minority adopted a sensationalist sales pitch (as in Reeves & Co.’s 1875 publication How Fortunes are Made on the Stock Exchange), the majority sought to endow speculation with the respectable and prudential connotations of investment. To begin, they recommended speculative approaches while distancing themselves from the word and its toxic connotations. So, in an 1869 book called Double Your Income, the Omnium Investment Agency reassured readers that their object was not “to lead or advise them to speculate in any way whatever,” but to help them “to improve their position by the practice of sure and safe principles, without in any way trusting their property to the chances of speculation.”Footnote 70 In time, however, outside brokers sought to sanitize speculation. Their promotional materials increasingly conflated it with investment, as with Gutteridge’s Speculation and Investment in Stocks and Shares (1882), Percy Campbell’s True Principles of Steady Successful Speculation and Investment (1885), and Duncan on Investment and Speculation in Stocks and Shares (1895). Investment and speculation, according to the author of the last of these, were “twin sisters, and so nearly alike that it is almost impossible to discriminate between them,” since both activities aimed to maximize returns and minimize risks. The logical result was a policy of “speculative investments.”Footnote 71
What helped this message to resonate was the sustained decline in yields on government securities that made ultra-cautious approaches to the market less attractive. The Crimean War had seen the last major issues of Consols; after this, Gladstonian finance and redemption had begun to shrink the national debt. The reduction of yield was formalized in 1888 when Chancellor of the Exchequer George Goschen created conversion stock bearing 2.75 percent interest till 1903, falling to 2.50 percent thereafter.Footnote 72 Outside brokers warned the public that what were once considered risk-free investments in fact carried their own dangers, of sacrificing the income that could be obtained by a more active approach to the market. The false belief that small interest ensured safety and large interest spelled danger was a fallacy “that keeps money idle and moneyed people poorer than they need be.”Footnote 73
Though branded as little short of gambling by its critics, speculation on the cover system was not presented in this way by outside brokers. Their adverts stressed the prudential element—it was “Stock Exchange Speculation on Limited Liability,” and “Stock-Exchange Dealing Made Safe.”Footnote 74 They could do this because, although the public’s potential profits were limitless, the losses were defined and limited—even if the stock fell 20 percent, they would only lose their 1 percent cover. Brokers thus recommended this system “with a view of protecting our clients” from the “violent fluctuations” that could occur in times of panic.Footnote 75 The seeming transparency of the liabilities and charges were particularly significant at a time when the opacity of inside brokers’ commission rates was a constant cause of complaint.Footnote 76 As cover was deposited up-front, it was also a method of dealing that protected the broker against clients who might otherwise amass large debts they were unable to pay. This can therefore be seen as the financial equivalent of the ready-money, fixed-price system that was transforming the shopping experience and taking “a good deal of the anxiety out of shopping for consumers of more slender means.”Footnote 77 One of the chief objections to the idea of people of modest means speculating—that they could not withstand the risks they ran—was therefore undercut. Anyone who could find the £5 or £10 usually advertised as the minimum level of cover could become a speculator. The outside brokers therefore claimed that they were democratizing finance—opportunities for realizing large returns “were formerly limited to persons in direct communication with the City, and involved the handling of large sums of money.” But now a wider public could participate, “at any distance, and without interruption to their usual pursuits, and . . . the actual money handled need be but little.”Footnote 78 Even their staunchest critics admitted that the cover system placed speculation “practically within the reach of all.”Footnote 79
Just as canny retailers were turning shopping for pleasure into a luxury that could be experienced by a mass middle-class audience, so speculation was presented as a form of leisure that could be enjoyed in comfort and with one’s respectability intact. The larger outside brokers ploughed substantial resources in their offices, expanding them piecemeal as neighboring premises became available, mirroring the process by which draper’s shops were evolving into department stores. For example, John Shaw initially occupied 1–5 Wardrobe Chambers, but eventually filled 1–15.Footnote 80 In 1884 the Civil Service Gazette described Shaw’s offices as “comfortably, even luxuriously furnished, and clients, or intending clients, would find them a most comfortable lounge or resting-place.”Footnote 81 There, one had free access to “telephones, financial journals, record books, and papers.”Footnote 82 George Gregory went one further: his Hints to Speculators and Investors contained fold-out illustrations of his offices in Tokenhouse Buildings, by the Bank of England, depicting respectable middle-class customers enjoying what looked more like club rooms for reading newspapers, writing letters, making phone calls, and engaging in polite conversation. These illustrations, which gave a “birds-eye view” of the offices, also reinforced the transparency of Gregory’s business. Readers were encouraged to survey the entire space before paying a visit, to reassure themselves that they could visit with safety, and quite possibly profit.
Moreover, whereas inside brokers were not permitted to branch, outside brokers did. Both Shaw and Gregory opened branches in popular retail and leisure spots in the West End, such as Westbourne Grove in Bayswater, close to Whiteley’s department store, New Oxford Street, opposite Mudie’s Library, and on Piccadilly, opposite the recently constructed Pavilion Theatre, an upmarket West End music hall.Footnote 83 Outsiders were thus responsible for bringing speculation out of its confines in the alleyways of the City and into the safer and better-known spaces of the fashionable West End. These West End exchanges were patronized because they made speculation both convenient and respectable—it could easily be integrated into one’s daily routines without loss of face. As journalist, author, and denizen of clubland Joseph Hatton, explained:
You can go in and speculate and gamble, at a rate never dreamt of by those wild, tearing, duelling gamesters of Walpole’s time: you can do it in cold blood in your morning coat, then take a ride in the park, lunch calmly at your club, go home unruffled to dinner, and escort your wife to the Opera in the evening, or to a meeting at Exeter Hall with the mild air of a bishop.Footnote 84
Customers could thus move seamlessly between these different leisure spaces—department stores, libraries, clubrooms, and outside brokerages—with speculation joining the ranks of at least semirespectable pleasures available to the late Victorian middle classes. Outside brokerages also multiplied in towns and cities across the country. The large London firms opened provincial branches. By the end of 1887, Shaw was operating in Manchester and Brighton, while by 1891, Gregory had outlets in Brighton, Hastings, Folkestone, Leeds, and Hull.Footnote 85 But here they faced stiff competition from local offices offering similar services. As early as 1885, for example, Manchester residents could make “unlimited profits with limited risks” with Max Browne & Co. on Market Street, or try their luck with T. P. Edwards on Bank Street, who transacted “Stock Exchange Business with Limited Liability.”Footnote 86
Though some accounts gendered speculators as male, outside brokerages had many female clients, capitalizing on women’s longstanding involvement in the financial markets.Footnote 87 One commentator hinted at a taboo about women entering such spaces, suggesting that “lady tapers wait about the city whilst their male friends operate for them,” but it is clear that women also participated directly.Footnote 88 One account described a “bold woman” who typically spent the day at her broker’s, sitting “in the room where the tapes tick off the latest quotations hour after hour.” Departing ostensibly for lunch, she in fact was on the hunt for information, often hurrying back “with a tip that may turn out particularly well.”Footnote 89 Though men preponderated in the illustrations in Gregory’s Hints to Speculators, several female figures can also be seen, underlining the idea that women could safely negotiate these spaces. By the early 1890s, the Yorkshire Evening Post observed disapprovingly that “the craze for gambling with the bucket-shop man is growing amongst women,” with the number of cases in the courts involving women on the rise.Footnote 90 Another editorial even claimed that it was “well known in the City that ladies form the bulk of the clientele of ‘bucket shop’ keepers.”Footnote 91
What made speculation even easier is that it did not require constant attendance at the broker’s office. It could be conducted by post, telegraph, or—increasingly—telephone, and tracked through price lists in the daily newspaper. These facilities made it easy for men and women to keep their speculations secret, whether from employers or family members, thus mitigating feelings of guilt or shame. As one author noted, people could now “speculate without anyone being the wiser.”Footnote 92 This brought the stock market into the home, embedding it into the rituals of everyday life. “How many serious and revered fathers of families open their paper every morning with all the excitement of the baccarat player feverishly watching the turn of a card!” wondered the authors of one survey of the Edwardian West End.Footnote 93 This domestication of speculation made it much easier and much more imaginable to play the markets.
Winning Trust
Nevertheless, outside brokers could only legitimize speculation if they could persuade people to trust them. To understand how brokers cultivated trust, it is necessary to contextualize decisions to invest by looking more closely at the special characteristics of the media they used. Discussing the clients of outside brokers, the Financial Times observed:
The majority of these people would flatly refuse to hand over cash to a casual stranger who accosted them in the street and made them flattering offers in return—they would, indeed, be inclined to hand him over to the police for trying to obtain money by false pretences—but to an exactly similar request made through a newspaper or the post they make a ready response, and probably feel pained if they are called fools for having done so.Footnote 94
Why was this so? The Pall Mall Gazette suggested that it was a question of the relative novelty of print. “Mankind has had some thousands of years’ experience of the use and abuse of the human voice.” But “put a thing in print and a thousand men will believe it for one who would have believed it had it ever reached them through the ear.” This was particularly true of investors, and the paper thought it was “a vain aspiration to hope that men may some day be as rational with their eyes as they are with their ears.”Footnote 95
Though identifying an important point, these commentators ultimately exaggerate the gullibility of bucket-shop customers, missing the key difference between the two methods. Whereas the face-to-face approach demands an immediate response, the written appeal allows a choice to be made over a period of time. Alan Mackintosh has recently argued that this temporal aspect to decision making was crucial to the success of the much-maligned patent medicine trade. He sees the two defining characteristics of such advertising as the communication of detailed information and constant reiteration. This enabled “a negotiating process” between vendor and customer “which might be lengthy. Consumers expected to see the same information several times,” and could assimilate it at their own rate. This meant that “a medicine might seem familiar even before any of it had been taken.”Footnote 96 Outside brokers were operating in a very similar way, creating a sense of familiarity—and therefore safety—through ubiquity in the press and other media. If readers were not immediately convinced by an advertisement, they could ponder the proposition over time, at their own pace, and be gradually persuaded. The effect was compounded by the sheer volume of outside broker advertising. Though in competition with one another, their advertisements fundamentally corroborated each other’s claims, endlessly amplifying and embellishing them so that they hardened into received wisdom.
From familiarity it was a short step to intimacy, for print allowed brokers to simulate a personal appeal that helped them win trust in an impersonal market. Though some outside brokerages were incorporated as limited companies and adopted an institutional persona, such as the Universal Stock Exchange and the London and Paris Exchange, many others were organized as partnerships, and foregrounded the personality of their proprietors. Their advertisements took advantage of the perceived aloofness of inside brokers by stressing their approachability and inclusivity, reassuring potential clients that “the same attention is given to the smallest operator as to the largest.”Footnote 97 Whereas inside brokers were often wary of giving advice, it was different with outsiders: Shaw’s clients could come and confer with “the intelligent and numerous staff who . . . are thoroughly experienced and well able to advise and enlighten even the dullest of those interested in monetary matters.”Footnote 98 Often written in the first person, their advertisements adopted a personable tone; after he refurbished and extended his head office, Shaw extended newspaper readers a personal invitation: “Should you be in the neighbourhood of Wardrobe-chambers, may I ask you to call and see the various improvements that have been recently made?”Footnote 99 Like many other brokers, Shaw offered a discretionary service where clients would send money and he would “watch the market closely in order to choose the most favourable opportunity for operating on their behalf.”Footnote 100 His advertisements tried to make “John Shaw” a shorthand for honesty, a brand that the public would recognize and trust—“a straightforward, honourable, and responsible man.”Footnote 101
These techniques helped to entrench the idea of the outside broker as not simply a businessman but also a friend, adviser, and confidante. George Gregory placed advertisements every Christmas wishing season’s greetings to “Clients and Friends.”Footnote 102 By 1894 this had evolved into an annual light-hearted poem or short story in which Gregory invariably featured, conveying tips and quips to his clientele.Footnote 103 He even experimented with the free gifts that were a common device in the market for consumer goods.Footnote 104 In 1894 he started distributing branded blotting pads, while two years later he grabbed more attention by sending a thousand walking canes to clients as a New Year’s gift.Footnote 105 Moreover, the investment guides and manuals that Gregory and his fellow brokers distributed gratis also acted as gifts underlining their giver’s benevolence. His ads boasted that he had published “for the information and guidance of the investing public more literature than all the members of the Stock Exchange put together. . . . Not being bound by the red tape of the Stock Exchange,” he was “able to supply these works to the public free of charge.”Footnote 106 Such strategies highlight the salience of ideas from the field of “emotional finance,” most notably that trust in financial markets is not simply a matter of “rational” calculation but is built on stories “weaving together reason and emotion.”Footnote 107 Having access to personalities like Shaw and Gregory as figures of trust helped clients to manage the anxieties generated by decision making under conditions of uncertainty.Footnote 108
The location of brokers’ advertisements was critical to the project of persuasion. Existing scholarship tends to focus on the outsiders’ production of “sham” newspapers that “mimicked . . . mainstream financial publications” but lured readers to buy worthless securities.Footnote 109 More significant, however, was their close relationship with the mainstream press, for if their messages were restricted to their own publications, they would have had limited wider resonance. As newspaper reading became a habit for growing numbers in the late nineteenth century, newspapers were imbricated in the fabric of readers’ everyday lives, their serial nature enabling the building of trust over time.Footnote 110 The relationship was not based simply on perceptions of reliability and credibility: newspapers were keen to construct “emotional communities” with their readers based on deeper affective bonds.Footnote 111 Advertisements thus enjoyed a degree of transferred authority from the medium in which they appeared, a shortcut to trust.Footnote 112
The most respectable of newspapers were happy to print the advertisements of the outsiders, and to give them privileged positions. London dailies like The Standard and the Daily News sometimes placed full-column ads for outside brokers directly alongside their City articles, while popular society magazines like Truth allowed notices for outsiders to appear at the foot of their financial pages.Footnote 113 This method gave the advertising broker an implicit seal of approval. Though these papers may have contained editorial content critical of outside brokers—Truth was famed for its exposure of swindling bucket-shops alongside other fraudsters—the fact that they also carried advertisements for outside brokers blunted the criticism.Footnote 114 The warnings may even have helped advertising brokers, for the logical inference was that they applied to other brokers, not the ones who advertised in that journal. The idea that newspapers had a responsibility to police their advertising columns was a minority view. One of the objectives of the Provincial Newspaper Society, a trade organization established in 1836, was to collect and disseminate information about advertisers and advertising agents.Footnote 115 But this was with the intention of protecting members from imposition, rather than the public. The society’s circular often contained warnings about particular brokers, warnings that members could pass on to their readers if they wished, but it was happy for its members to continue accepting advertisements from them, simply advising that they should insist on payment in advance.Footnote 116
The authority of the newspaper was exploited even more directly with “puffs,” or disguised advertisements, a ubiquitous facet of the nineteenth-century press.Footnote 117 Papers, particularly provincial ones, frequently published copy written by businesses in their news columns without any indication of its origin, a trade arranged via reputable London advertising agencies. Outside brokers made great use of this service for it was doubly useful, not only for the puff itself but also for the opportunity it gave to quote from the puff in advertisements, creating the appearance of a chorus of approval.Footnote 118 Though some newspapers levied a premium of 25 percent for leaving out the crucial word “advt,” the costs were far from prohibitive, with the Staffordshire Sentinel apparently charging just a shilling a line, while puffs in financial newspapers could be had for as little as £2.Footnote 119 Puffs also took other forms, such as recommendations to invest with a particular broker in the “Answers to Correspondents” column, or even celebrity interviews with recommended brokers.Footnote 120
Moreover, even articles that were critical of outside brokers sometimes blurred rather than clarified moral distinctions between insiders and outsiders. For example, The Economist admitted that time bargains in the Stock Exchange were no different in principle from wagers in an outside brokerage.Footnote 121 Moreover, it recognized that some of what went on in the House “cannot be termed straight,” and that the “dodges” of “some of the less reputable members . . . might almost make a respectable ‘bucket shop’ blush,” such as unloading “rotten securities” onto their clients.Footnote 122 Commentators frequently drew attention to the Stock Exchange’s failure to reform itself and modernize its business practices, despite a Royal Commission report that had recommended reforms in 1878.Footnote 123 The Saturday Review, for example, complained that the Stock Exchange enforced “obsolete” and “antiquated” rules, which added “extravagantly” to the costs borne by clients.Footnote 124 This meant that it was quite possible to criticize bucket-shops but still value the competition they offered as a “corrective for powerful but defective monopolist institutions.”Footnote 125
Conflicting views could thus be found across the range of the newspaper press and within individual titles. The idea of a newspaper speaking with a coherent voice only gradually developed with the onset of the “new journalism” of the late nineteenth century. Recognizing Victorian newspapers as miscellanies of different, often contradictory, voices that the reader, rather than editor, was expected to interpret, is crucial to understanding the task facing investors.Footnote 126 Wondering why “some people insisted on ignoring the advice appearing almost daily in the press, and continued to hand money to bucket-shop keepers” downplays the contradictions that characterized the market for information and advice, and the emotional dynamics underpinning investment.Footnote 127
Competition or Collaboration?
Although relations between insiders and outsiders were often antagonistic, there were also intersections between the two markets. This was facilitated by the fact that the London Stock Exchange’s rules did not forbid its members from doing business with such outsiders.Footnote 128 While it was notorious that the money used to speculate on the cover system was not actually invested in the stocks concerned and was merely used to gamble on prices, some of this money did make its way into the House. In cases in which an outside broker faced heavy liabilities on a particular stock, he could choose to “hedge” with an inside broker.Footnote 129 When it came to the outsiders’ investment business, there were also ways for insiders to benefit. Not all securities were traded on the London Stock Exchange, and because of their ability to advertise, outside brokers were better placed than insiders to negotiate securities for which there was not a ready market, making them a handy go-between when a client wanted to buy or sell such a stock.Footnote 130 And when outsiders did investment business in shares that were quoted on the London Stock Exchange, the only way they could do this was with inside brokers on a commission-sharing basis, which effectively cast them in the role of touts for the insiders. At a time when growing numbers of member-brokers stretched business very thin, this extra source of income was particularly valued. One journalist claimed that there were “over 5300 members, but only business for about 500.”Footnote 131 Thus, outside business brought “grist to the mill of many an inside broker who would otherwise have none . . . many of the inside brokers absolutely depend for their livelihood upon the business brought to them by the outside brokers.”Footnote 132 Another commentator also noted this growing interdependence, observing that “many firms, including some of reputed high standing, are not only willing, but eager” to secure this business. This remark was prompted by the bankruptcy of an inside broker after promoting and financing an unsuccessful outside brokerage, the London and Provincial Stock Exchange Company (Limited).Footnote 133
Though it is difficult to quantify the scale of their dealing with any confidence given the potential unreliability of their own numbers, the outsiders were clearly becoming a significant presence on the market. Despite 1893 being a “disastrous” year on the Stock Exchange, Gregory seemed unaffected, choosing this moment to enlarge his headquarters, which occupied 5,000 square feet by the end of the year.Footnote 134 He was employing 100 clerks by this time, and boasted that “the trade of a day frequently involves the handling of English and American Railway shares to the amount of half a million of pounds sterling.”Footnote 135 He claimed to have 20,000 clients on his books, at a time when one of the largest inside firms, G. S. Herbert, had around 3,000, numbers that enabled Gregory to declare himself “the biggest stockbroker on earth.”Footnote 136 It was not surprising that more than a few insiders wanted a piece of the action. In 1893 the managing director of the Exchange Telegraph Company, Captain W. H. Davies, claimed that his outside subscribers did business with a total of 294 member-brokers, dealing in £53 million of stock. One large outsider employed 20 members to do his business on the Stock Exchange, another had 15. While Davies had an interest in emphasizing the extent of cooperation in order to dissuade the London Stock Exchange from cutting off the outsiders, the numbers were based on a thorough inquiry by the agents of the company and verified with reference to the subscribers’ books.Footnote 137
Indeed, the relationship between the outside and inside markets became closer as some outsiders attempted to use their volume of business to move prices. In spring 1889, for example, Gregory ran a sustained campaign to drive up the price of East London Railway Consolidated Stock, with his ads urging readers to “squeeze the bears,” “corner the bears,” and “buy east london ordinary and demand delivery.”Footnote 138 Market reports observed how the price of East Londons was rising, “owing to purchases effected by ‘outside’ brokers,” though not to the extent that Gregory had hoped.Footnote 139 By this time, it was not unusual for City columns to note the impact the activities of outsiders was having on the market, causing sudden upward movements or relapses.Footnote 140 Rumors of the failure of any of the larger outside firms could temporarily depress prices.Footnote 141
The outside market could seemingly withstand any scandal or failure, even involving the largest of its players. When Gregory died suddenly of pneumonia in 1897, it emerged that he had in fact been trading pseudonymously.Footnote 142 His real name was Ashley Cronmire, which became a liability after his brother, Sidney, also a stockbroker, was criminally convicted of fraud in 1886.Footnote 143 The case showed how easily old identities could be discarded and new ones crafted in print, and the fate of his firm, which collapsed into insolvency after his death, underlined the precarity of the outsiders’ business.Footnote 144 Ironically, the insolvency was widely attributed to the success of his last tip, Great Easterns, which had risen far beyond his predictions, leaving him unable to pay his clients.Footnote 145 After the failure, “a great mistrust arose among the public” against outsiders, yet the business did not stay down for long, flourishing in the Edwardian period, when even critical journalists recognized the outside broker as constituting “a notable factor in the financial mechanism.”Footnote 146
Outside brokers thus took a prominent place in the increasingly complex ecology of the market, which saw growing numbers of outside participants, including banks, investment trusts, and the London offices of foreign financial institutions.Footnote 147 A revealing indicator of their influence was the number of rival agencies that started offering similar services and using similar methods, in the process blurring the boundaries between different types of financial actor. Banks began advertising their stock- and share-dealing services much more aggressively, and while they were not mistrusted to the same extent, this “touting for business” cast them in a comparable role to the outside brokers.Footnote 148 Though the banks—like many outside brokers—brought their business to the House, their power was considered problematic by some. Provincial brokers were particularly concerned that banks allowed investors to bypass them when accessing the London market, with one member of the Liverpool Stock Exchange arguing that “many Banks in the Provinces practically came within the definition of outside Brokers . . . they were in fact Bucket Shops.”Footnote 149 Brokers on the London Stock Exchange also had reservations, one complaining in 1909 that many were “now practically the salaried clerks of the Banks, who were in reality acting as Stock Brokers.”Footnote 150 It was not only banks that were acting as alternative entry points to the stock market; even department stores were getting in on the act, with Whiteley’s opening a stock- and share-dealing department for its customers before the start of the Great War.Footnote 151
The fact that outside brokers sometimes established their own newspapers had begun to blur the boundaries between brokerage and journalism, and this process accelerated when the financial press started offering their readers stock- and share-dealing services. The Financial World’s Stock and Share Agency, established in 1888 and dealing in “Mining, Brewery, Tramway, Omnibus, and Miscellaneous Shares,” was an early example.Footnote 152 While these were creating alternative markets to the London Stock Exchange, other services sought to funnel money into the official market. An example was The Critic, which established a stock and share agency for clients who did not feel confident dealing direct with a broker. For an annual fee of five guineas, clients could select the member-broker they wished to do their business, and the agency would handle all transactions, including checking the broker’s statements.Footnote 153 Newspapers had long been a platform for trading, carrying advertisements of stocks and shares for sale or wanted.Footnote 154 But the idea reached its apogee in 1912 with the opening of the Daily Mail Stock Exchange, a service to match buyers and sellers. The scheme prompted the ire of Stock Exchange members, particularly as it was sold to the public using the methods of the bucket-shop. The Daily Mail even told readers that it allowed them to bypass “the cumbrous organisation of the Stock Exchange, with its brokers’ commissions and jobbers’ profits.”Footnote 155 And, as with the bucket-shops, some members thought that the Exchange Telegraph Company should be ordered to cut its supply of prices to the Northcliffe press.Footnote 156 Thus, if the London Stock Exchange itself was slow to imitate the outside brokers’ techniques for expanding the market, a variety of outside agencies were bringing these methods further into the mainstream.Footnote 157
Conclusion
By highlighting the role of outside brokers in the development of the securities market, this article has sought to emphasize the importance of looking beyond official institutions and actors when studying the history of capitalism. As Kenneth Lipartito and Lisa Jacobson argue, understanding capitalism’s complex ecosystem involves “interrogating the relationship between the manifest and the hidden, the mainstream and the marginal, and the licit and the illicit.”Footnote 158 These other markets are not simply “appendages” to the “real” market, but can intersect with it, and influence how it operates and develops. It therefore makes sense, as Rob Aitken contends, to conceptualize these “fringe” markets “not as a space external to the conventional world of finance, but as a kind of border zone that is neither fully inside nor separate from that world.”Footnote 159 Opening up these fringe markets for exploration helps scholars to rethink boundaries, relations, and practices in the history of capitalism.
Stepping outside the Stock Exchange provides a fresh, if unfamiliar, view of the development of investment and speculation in Britain, allowing dominant narratives to be subverted. Historians have contrasted the “aggressive marketing campaigns” of the New York Stock Exchange in the early twentieth century with the lack of similar efforts in London “to promote shareholder democratization.”Footnote 160 Widening the focus to include the outsiders presents an alternative picture that allows the aggressive marketing that was democratizing Britain’s financial markets from the 1870s to be identified. Despite their enduring association with fraudulent practices, outside brokers were more than simply the London Stock Exchange’s shadowy “others,” whose poor reputation served to legitimize the official markets. In fact, their blanket advertising, prolific branching, and mass production of financial advice were instrumental in popularizing investment.
Recognizing this encourages exploration of hitherto neglected likenesses between consumer and financial markets in Britain. Rather than conceiving of these as distinct, it is possible to reframe stocks and shares as another of the markets being transformed by innovative Victorian entrepreneurs seeking to reach untapped ranks of consumers by new methods.Footnote 161 Labeled “quacks” by their opponents, outside brokers were indeed applying the methods of the patent medicine trade to financial products.Footnote 162 When the outsiders made the process of speculation as simple as filling out a newspaper coupon—as Redway, Furness, and Co. had by 1909—it is clear that they were disrupting boundaries between the stock market, consumer society, and the “new journalism” in ways that have been underappreciated.Footnote 163 By sanitizing speculation and making it more accessible, they packaged “playing the market” as one of the new forms of commercialized leisure that could be enjoyed by late Victorians. Though there were many casualties, there were also beneficiaries, such as the elderly Nonconformist minister who, when interviewed by a reporter inside a bucket-shop, “confessed that he had had a ‘flutter’ on the Stock Exchange every day for many years, and felt quite miserable without the mild excitement.”Footnote 164 Such remarks bring out the emotional appeal of the stock market, which was able to generate a frisson of hazard in a society where lotteries were illegal, and other forms of gambling were becoming heavily restricted. Though many of their clients would never appear in a shareholder register, the outside brokers were responsible for drawing an unquantifiable number of Victorians into the stock market.