High income - Listed domestic companies, total

The value for Listed domestic companies, total in High income was 26,378 as of 2019. As the graph below shows, over the past 44 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 29,762 in 2007 and a minimum value of 12,395 in 1977.

Definition: Listed domestic companies, including foreign companies which are exclusively listed, are those which have shares listed on an exchange at the end of the year. Investment funds, unit trusts, and companies whose only business goal is to hold shares of other listed companies, such as holding companies and investment companies, regardless of their legal status, are excluded. A company with several classes of shares is counted once. Only companies admitted to listing on the exchange are included.

Source: World Federation of Exchanges database.

See also:

Year Value
1975 13,256
1976 12,829
1977 12,395
1978 12,455
1979 12,572
1980 15,559
1981 15,610
1982 15,273
1983 16,018
1984 16,794
1985 17,252
1986 18,166
1987 19,319
1988 18,944
1989 18,728
1990 18,375
1991 19,097
1992 19,082
1993 19,944
1994 20,402
1995 21,523
1996 22,643
1997 23,120
1998 23,735
1999 24,109
2000 25,668
2001 25,939
2002 25,652
2003 27,813
2004 25,162
2005 25,455
2006 29,398
2007 29,762
2008 29,153
2009 28,162
2010 27,919
2011 28,418
2012 28,017
2013 29,118
2014 29,336
2015 27,450
2016 27,080
2017 26,829
2018 27,069
2019 26,378

Development Relevance: Stock market size can be measured in various ways, and each may produce a different ranking of countries. The development of an economy's financial markets is closely related to its overall development. Well-functioning financial systems provide good and easily accessible information which can lower transaction costs and subsequently improve resource allocation and boosts economic growth. Both banking systems and stock markets enhance growth, the main factor in poverty reduction. At low levels of economic development commercial banks tend to dominate the financial system, while at higher levels domestic stock markets tend to become more active and efficient relative to domestic banks. Open economies with sound macroeconomic policies, good legal systems, and shareholder protection attract capital and therefore have larger financial markets. Recent research on stock market development shows that modern communications technology and increased financial integration have resulted in more cross-border capital flows, a stronger presence of financial firms around the world, and the migration of stock exchange activities to international exchanges. Many firms in emerging markets now cross-list on international exchanges, which provides them with lower cost capital and more liquidity-traded shares. However, this also means that exchanges in emerging markets may not have enough financial activity to sustain them, putting pressure on them to rethink their operations.

Limitations and Exceptions: Data cover measures of size (market capitalization, number of listed domestic companies) and liquidity (value of shares traded as a percentage of gross domestic product, value of shares traded as a percentage of market capitalization). The comparability of such data across countries may be limited by conceptual and statistical weaknesses, such as inaccurate reporting and differences in accounting standards.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: A company is considered domestic when it is incorporated in the same country as where the exchange is located. The only exception is the case of foreign companies which are exclusively listed on an exchange (i.e., the foreign company is not listed on any other exchange as defined in the domestic market capitalization definition).

Aggregation method: Sum

Periodicity: Annual

General Comments: Stock market data were previously sourced from Standard & Poor's until they discontinued their "Global Stock Markets Factbook" and database in April 2013. Time series have been replaced in December 2015 with data from the World Federation of Exchanges and

Classification

Topic: Financial Sector Indicators

Sub-Topic: Capital markets