| Hugh Stretton - 1999 - 868 páginas
...some over-optimistic, many fraudulent. A thousand subscribers were found for one new company formed 'for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is'. Because sham companies were diverting investors from its own share sales, the South Sea Company prosecuted... | |
| Robert Sobel - 2000 - 416 páginas
...to manufacture radish oil, which had ho known use. Another, which was oversubscribed, was "A company for Carrying on an Undertaking of Great Advantage, but Nobody to Know what it is." A newspaper of the time wrote that the cry was "For God's sake, let us subscribe to something; we don't... | |
| Janet Gleeson - 2001 - 300 páginas
...launched to capitalize on the new fashion for financial fluttering. Many of them, like the "company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is," were as fictitious as the emerald mountain of Mississippi. In Paris, euphoria vanished and the atmosphere... | |
| Robert Menschel - 2002 - 256 páginas
...company with no stated purpose at all. The prospectus coyly hinted that the company had been organized "for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is." For every £2 invested, the promoter declared that subscribers would be entitled to £100 a year in... | |
| John Cassidy - 2009 - 413 páginas
...and Silver from Lead and orher sorts of ore." One cheeky soul even set up a company "for carrying out an undertaking of great advantage but nobody to know what it is." After gathering up the subscriptions. he fled to the Continent.3 In September 1720. the bubble burst.... | |
| James Macdonald - 2003 - 590 páginas
...'Terra Australis." Others were mere hoaxes, none of which has become more famous than the "Company for carrying on an Undertaking of great Advantage, but Nobody to know what it is."* More than one hundred of these lesser bubbles were started in May and *Sadly, John Carswell, author... | |
| Andy Hargreaves - 2003 - 241 páginas
...quicksilver into a malleable fine metal, creating a wheel for perpetual motion and, most improbably of all, "for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage: but nobody to know what it is."1 This period of delirious, widespread speculation in ventures of questionable substance and merit... | |
| David Skeel - 2005 - 264 páginas
...Savings and Loan, 122 Commodity Futures Trading Commission, 146 Commonwealth Edison, 85 "a company for carrying on an undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is," 18, 115 Compaq, 155 competition. See also Icarus Effect; monopolies; regulators and Carnegie, Andrew,... | |
| Francis Wheen - 2005 - 340 páginas
..."For trading in Human Hair"; "For a Wheel of Perpetual Motion"; and, most gloriously, 35 "a Company for carrying on an Undertaking of Great Advantage, but Nobody to know what it is." Similarly, some of Wall Street's best-performing stocks in 1987 were enterprises that had neither profits... | |
| George Courtauld - 2005 - 76 páginas
...the South Sea Bubble: 1714 Gabriel Fahrenheit makes the first mercury thermometer 1715 Louis XIV dies "An undertaking of great advantage, but nobody to know what it is." Company prospectus of the South Sea Bubble 1721 Sir Robert Walpole becomes First or 'Prime' Minister... | |
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