Shopping on line can be easy, simple and save you lots of money. It can also take a lot of your time, frustrate you, and result in unwanted purchases. Now the same can be said for regular high street shopping, but with the vast opportunity presented by the Internet it will pay you to spend a few minutes reading this and understanding how to better optimize your Wall Street shopping experience:

1. Compare - without doubt the biggest advantage that the Wall Street offers shoppers today is the ability to compare thousands of Wall Street at a time. This is a great thing, but not necessarily all the time! Too much can be daunting at times so take advantage of the great comparison sites and where possible let them do the hard work for you.

2. Research - if it has been said it will be on the internet. Ignorance is no longer a justifiable reason for buying the wrong thing. Take the time to research in detail everything that you could possible want to know about

3. Testimonials - don't know anybody that has bought a Wall Street? Wrong! If the Wall Street is good the internet will let you know. Use the Internet as a friend and get testimonials before you buy.

4. Questions - Got a question about Wall Street then search the Forums, FAQ's, Blogs etc. Don't be afraid to ask .....

5. Reputation - Never heard of the company selling Wall Street? Don't worry, no reason why you should know every company in the world, but you know someone that does! Use the internet to find out what people are saying about Wall Street and build up a picture of their reputation for sales, returns, customer service, delivery etc.

6. Returns - still worried that even after all of the above your Wall Street wont be what you want? Check out the returns policy. There is so much competition now that someone, somewhere is bound to offer the terms that you are comfortable with.

7. Feedback - happy with your Wall Street then let people know, after all you are depending on others people input in your buying decision, so why not give a little back.

8. Security - check for the yellow padlock on the Wall Street site before you buy, and the s after http:/ /i.e. https:// = a secure site

9. Contact - got a question about Wall Street, or want to leave a comment then check out the sites contact page. Reputable companies have them and respond.

10. Payment - ready to pay for your Wall Street, then use your credit card or PayPal! Be aware of companies that don't accept them, there may be genuine reasons but given the huge amount of choice you have when buying online there is no reason at all not to buy via credit card or PayPal.

as seen from the intersection of Broad and Wall Streets For other uses, see Wall Street (disambiguation).

Wall Street is a city street in lower Manhattan in New York City in the United States of America. It runs east from Broadway (New York City) downhill to South Street (Manhattan) on the East River, through the historical center of the Financial District, Manhattan. Wall Street was the first permanent home of the New York Stock Exchange, and over time Wall Street became the name of the surrounding geographic neighborhood. Profile of Manhattan Community Board 1, retrieved July 17, 2007. Wall Street is also shorthand (or a metonym) for "influential financial interests" in the U.S. Merriam-Webster Online, retrieved July 17, 2007. as well as for the financial industry in the New York City area.

Several major U.S. stock and other exchanges remain headquartered on Wall Street and in the Financial District, including the NYSE, NASDAQ, American Stock Exchange, NYMEX, and NYBOT. Many New York-based financial firms are no longer headquartered on Wall Street, but are in midtown Manhattan, the outer boroughs of the city, Long Island, Westchester County, Fairfield County, Connecticut, or New Jersey.

History at the time but is today the Federal Hall National Memorial.

Despite widely held beliefs that Wall Street is based on the existence of a wall, maps of New Amsterdam show two different names for this street, and with one name 'cingel,' an earthen wall is indeed indicated. However, the name 'De Waal Straat' (see map) refers not to a wall, but to an important group of people that helped establish New Amsterdam: the Walloons. New Amsterdam Walloons By 1630 the total population of New Netherland was about 300, many being French speaking Walloons. It is estimated about 270 lived in the area surrounding Fort Amsterdam, primarily working as farmers. The Dutch word for Walloon is Waal.

During the 17th century, Wall Street formed the northern boundary of the New Amsterdam settlement. In the 1640s basic picket and plank fences denoted plots and residences in the colony. History of New York State, Book II, Chapter II, Part IV. Editor, Dr. James Sullivan, Online Edition by Holice, Deb & Pam. Retrieved 20 August 2006. Later, on behalf of the West India Company, Peter Stuyvesant, in part using African slaves, White New Yorkers in Slave Times New York Historical Society. Retrieved 20 August 2006. (PDF) led the Netherlands in the construction of a stronger stockade. By the time war had developed with the English, a strengthened wall Timeline: A selected Wall Street chronology PBS Online, 21 October 2004. Retrieved 20 August 2006 of timber and earth was created by 1653 fortified by palisades. The wall was created, and strengthened over time, as a defense against attack from various Indian tribes, New England colonists, and the United Kingdom. In 1685 surveyors laid out Wall Street along the lines of the original stockade. NYSE Timeline 2006 NYSE Group, Inc. Retrieved 19 August 2006. The wall was dismantled by the British in 1699. And while the original name referred to the Walloons, the French speaking Belgians that helped populate this settlements in the beginning, the name was now easily taken to refer to the wall that once was here.

As late as the 1840s, thousands of pigs roamed Wall Street consuming garbage. It was an early sanitation system.

In the late 18th century, there was a American sycamore tree at the foot of Wall Street under which traders and Speculation would gather to trade informally. In 1792, the traders formalized their association with the Buttonwood Agreement. This was the origin of the New York Stock Exchange. Today in History: January 4 - The New York Stock Exchange The Library of Congress. Retrieved 19 August 2006.

In 1889, the original stock report, Customers' Afternoon Letter, became the The Wall Street Journal, named in reference to the actual street, it is now an influential international daily business newspaper published in New York, New York. DOW JONES HISTORY - THE LATE 1800s 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved 19 August 2006. For many years, it had the widest newspaper circulation of any newspaper in the United States, although it is currently second to USA Today. The Wall Street Journal redesigns itself Robert Fulford. 20 April 2002. Retrieved 19 August 2006. It is owned by Dow Jones & Company.

Decline and revitalization The Manhattan Financial District (Manhattan) is one of the largest business districts in the United States, and second in New York City only to Midtown Manhattan. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the corporate culture of New York was a primary center for the construction of skyscrapers (rivaled only by Chicago). The Financial District, even today, actually makes up a distinct skyline of its own, separate from but not soaring to quite the same heights as its Midtown Manhattan counterpart a few miles to the north.

in front of the headquarters of JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 23 Wall Street, killing 38 and injuring 300 people.Built in 1914, 23 Wall Street was known as the "JPMorgan Chase & Co." and for decades the bank's headquarters was the most important address in American finance. At noon, on September 16, 1920, a bomb exploded in front of the bank, killing 38 and injuring 300. Shortly before the bomb went off a warning note was placed in a mailbox at the corner of Cedar Street and Broadway. While theories abound about who was behind the Wall Street bombing and why they did it, after twenty years investigating the matter, the FBI rendered the file inactive in 1940 without ever finding the perpetrators. after the crash.1929 brought the "Wall Street Crash of 1929" of the stock market, ushering in the Great Depression. During this era, new development of the Financial District had stagnated. The construction of the World Trade Center was one of the few major projects undertaken during the last three quarters of the 20th century and, financially, it was never terribly successful. Some point to the fact that it was actually a government-funded project, constructed by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey of New York State and New Jersey with the intention of spurring economic development in downtown. All the tools necessary to international trade were to be housed in the complex. However, at the beginning much of the space remained vacant.

Nonetheless, some large and powerful firms did purchase space in the World Trade Center. Further, it attracted other powerful businesses to the immediate neighborhood. In some ways, it could be argued that the World Trade Center changed the nexus of the Financial District from Wall Street to the Trade Center complex. When the World Trade Center was destroyed in the September 11, 2001 attacks, it left somewhat of an architectural void as new developments since the 1970s had played off the complex aesthetically. The attacks, however, contributed to the loss of business on Wall Street, due to temporary-to-permanent relocation to New Jersey and further decentralization with establishments transferred to cities like Chicago and Boston.

Wall Street itself and the Financial District as a whole are crowded with highrises by any standard of measure. Further, the loss of the World Trade Center has actually spurred development in the Financial District on a scale that hasn't been seen in decades. This is in part due to tax incentives provided by the federal, state and local governments to encourage development. A new World Trade Center complex, centered on Daniel Liebeskind's Memory Foundations plan, is in the early stages of development and one building has already been replaced. The centerpiece to this plan is the tall Freedom Tower. New residential buildings are already sprouting up, and buildings that were previously office space are being converted to residential units, also benefiting from the tax incentives. Better access to the Financial District is planned in the form of a new commuter rail station and a new downtown transportation center centered on Fulton Street (Manhattan).

Wall Street today To say that a corporation is a "Wall Street company" today does not necessarily mean that the company is physically located on Wall Street. It more likely means that the firm deals with financial services; such a firm could be headquartered in many places across the globe. Today, much of Wall Street's workforce tends to be made up of professionals working in the fields of law or finance who work for medium- to large-sized corporations. Many of the nearby businesses are local companies and chain stores that cater to the tastes of professionals and to the needs of the workforce. Most people who work in the Financial District commute in from suburbs in Long Island, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and the lower Hudson Valley.

Wall Street's culture is often criticized as being rigid. This is a decades-old stereotype stemming from the Wall Street's establishment's protection of their interests, and the link to the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant establishment. More recent criticism has centered on structural problems and lack of a desire to change well-established habits. Wall Street's establishment resists government oversight and regulation. At the same time, New York City has a reputation as a very bureaucratic city, which makes entry into the neighborhood difficult or even impossible for middle class entrepreneurs.

Since the founding of the Federal Reserve banking system, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in the Financial District has been the point where monetary policy in the United States is implemented (although it's decided in Washington, D.C. by the Federal Reserve Bank's Board of Governors). As such, New York State is today unique in that it's the only state that constitutes its own district of the Federal Reserve Banking system. This is perhaps partly owed to population distribution in the United States of the time, however. Until the 1960s, New York was the most populated state in the U.S.; it now ranks third, behind California and Texas. The NY Federal Reserve's president is the only regional Bank president with a permanent vote and is traditionally selected as its vice chairman. The bank has a gold vault 80 feet (25 m) beneath the street. This depository is the largest in the world, larger even than Fort Knox.

Buildings For a more complete list of buildings, see List of buildings in Lower Manhattan. Wall Street's architecture is generally rooted in the Gilded Age, though there are also some art deco influences in the neighborhood. Landmark buildings on Wall Street include Federal Hall, 14 Wall Street (Bankers Trust Company Building), 40 Wall Street (The Trump Building), and the New York Stock Exchange at the corner of Broad Street (Manhattan).

Personalities Over the years, certain persons associated with Wall Street have become famous, even legendary. Although their reputation is usually limited to members of the stock brokerage/banking community, several have gained national and international fame. Some earned their fame for their investment strategies, financing, reporting, legal or regulatory skills, while others are remembered for their greed. One of the most iconic representations of the market prosperity is the Charging Bull sculpture, by Arturo Di Modica. Representing the bull market economy, the sculpture was originally placed in front of the New York Stock Exchange, and subsequently moved to its current location in Bowling Green (New York City).

Cultural influence Wall Street vs. Main Street As a figure of speech contrasted to "Main Street," the term "Wall Street" can refer to big business interests against those of small business and the working or middle class. It is sometimes used more specifically to refer to research analysts, shareholders, and financial institutions such as investment banks. The idea of "Main Street" conjures up images of locally owned businesses and banks.While the phrase "Wall Street" is commonly used interchangeably with the phrase "Corporate America", it is also sometimes used in contrast to distinguish between the interests, culture, and lifestyles of investment banks and those of Fortune 500 industrial or service corporations.

Perceptions

The older skyscrapers often were built with elaborate facades; such elaborate aesthetics haven't been common in corporate architecture for decades. The World Trade Center, built in the 1970s, was very plain and utilitarian in comparison (the World Trade Center were often criticized as looking like two big boxes, despite their impressive height).

Wall Street, more than anything, represents financial and economic power. To Americans, Wall Street can sometimes represent elitism and power politics and cut-throat capitalism, but it also stirs feelings of pride about the market economy. Wall Street became the symbol of a country and economic system that many Americans see as having developed not through colonialism and plunder, but through trade, capitalism, and innovation. (Fraser 2005)

In literature and popular culture Herman Melville's classic short story Bartleby the Scrivener is subtitled A Story of Wall Street and provides an excellent portrayal of a kind and wealthy lawyer's struggle to reason with that which is unreasonable as he is pushed beyond his comfort zone to "feel" something real for humanity.

In William Faulkner's novel The Sound and the Fury, Jason Compson hits on other perceptions of Wall Street: after finding some of his stocks are doing poorly, he blames the Jews.

Wall Street was the subject of a 1970s pop song, "Wall Street Shuffle" by 10cc.

The film Wall Street (film) exemplifies many popular conceptions of Wall Street, being a tale of shady corporate dealings and insider trading. IMDb entry for Wall Street Retrieved 19 August 2006.

In Godzilla (1998 film), Godzilla walks down Wall Street after stomping through Fulton Fish Market.

In the Star Trek universe, the Ferengi, an ultra-capitalist race of extraterrestrial life in popular culture, regularly make religious pilgrimages to Wall Street (as it exists in that universe), since they value similar traits in other species.

In Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, the Sons of Liberty try to "unplug" Manhattan by setting off an EMP through a nuclear bomb inside Arsenal Gear over Wall Street, and in the ensuing chaos invade Manhattan, turning it into a republic, "Outer Heaven", to wage war against the illuminati group The Patriots.

Transport Because Wall Street was historically a commuter destination, it has seen much transportation infrastructure developed with it in mind. Today, the New York City subway has three stations at/under Wall Street itself:

Similar institutions The financial clout of Wall Street is most rivaled only by:

In North America, the nearest rivals are:

See also

References

Cited references

Bibliography



External links

as seen from the intersection of Broad and Wall Streets For other uses, see Wall Street (disambiguation).

Wall Street is a city street in lower Manhattan in New York City in the United States of America. It runs east from Broadway (New York City) downhill to South Street (Manhattan) on the East River, through the historical center of the Financial District, Manhattan. Wall Street was the first permanent home of the New York Stock Exchange, and over time Wall Street became the name of the surrounding geographic neighborhood. Profile of Manhattan Community Board 1, retrieved July 17, 2007. Wall Street is also shorthand (or a metonym) for "influential financial interests" in the U.S. Merriam-Webster Online, retrieved July 17, 2007. as well as for the financial industry in the New York City area.

Several major U.S. stock and other exchanges remain headquartered on Wall Street and in the Financial District, including the NYSE, NASDAQ, American Stock Exchange, NYMEX, and NYBOT. Many New York-based financial firms are no longer headquartered on Wall Street, but are in midtown Manhattan, the outer boroughs of the city, Long Island, Westchester County, Fairfield County, Connecticut, or New Jersey.

History at the time but is today the Federal Hall National Memorial.

Despite widely held beliefs that Wall Street is based on the existence of a wall, maps of New Amsterdam show two different names for this street, and with one name 'cingel,' an earthen wall is indeed indicated. However, the name 'De Waal Straat' (see map) refers not to a wall, but to an important group of people that helped establish New Amsterdam: the Walloons. New Amsterdam Walloons By 1630 the total population of New Netherland was about 300, many being French speaking Walloons. It is estimated about 270 lived in the area surrounding Fort Amsterdam, primarily working as farmers. The Dutch word for Walloon is Waal.

During the 17th century, Wall Street formed the northern boundary of the New Amsterdam settlement. In the 1640s basic picket and plank fences denoted plots and residences in the colony. History of New York State, Book II, Chapter II, Part IV. Editor, Dr. James Sullivan, Online Edition by Holice, Deb & Pam. Retrieved 20 August 2006. Later, on behalf of the West India Company, Peter Stuyvesant, in part using African slaves, White New Yorkers in Slave Times New York Historical Society. Retrieved 20 August 2006. (PDF) led the Netherlands in the construction of a stronger stockade. By the time war had developed with the English, a strengthened wall Timeline: A selected Wall Street chronology PBS Online, 21 October 2004. Retrieved 20 August 2006 of timber and earth was created by 1653 fortified by palisades. The wall was created, and strengthened over time, as a defense against attack from various Indian tribes, New England colonists, and the United Kingdom. In 1685 surveyors laid out Wall Street along the lines of the original stockade. NYSE Timeline 2006 NYSE Group, Inc. Retrieved 19 August 2006. The wall was dismantled by the British in 1699. And while the original name referred to the Walloons, the French speaking Belgians that helped populate this settlements in the beginning, the name was now easily taken to refer to the wall that once was here.

As late as the 1840s, thousands of pigs roamed Wall Street consuming garbage. It was an early sanitation system.

In the late 18th century, there was a American sycamore tree at the foot of Wall Street under which traders and Speculation would gather to trade informally. In 1792, the traders formalized their association with the Buttonwood Agreement. This was the origin of the New York Stock Exchange. Today in History: January 4 - The New York Stock Exchange The Library of Congress. Retrieved 19 August 2006.

In 1889, the original stock report, Customers' Afternoon Letter, became the The Wall Street Journal, named in reference to the actual street, it is now an influential international daily business newspaper published in New York, New York. DOW JONES HISTORY - THE LATE 1800s 2006 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. Retrieved 19 August 2006. For many years, it had the widest newspaper circulation of any newspaper in the United States, although it is currently second to USA Today. The Wall Street Journal redesigns itself Robert Fulford. 20 April 2002. Retrieved 19 August 2006. It is owned by Dow Jones & Company.

Decline and revitalization The Manhattan Financial District (Manhattan) is one of the largest business districts in the United States, and second in New York City only to Midtown Manhattan. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the corporate culture of New York was a primary center for the construction of skyscrapers (rivaled only by Chicago). The Financial District, even today, actually makes up a distinct skyline of its own, separate from but not soaring to quite the same heights as its Midtown Manhattan counterpart a few miles to the north.

in front of the headquarters of JPMorgan Chase & Co. at 23 Wall Street, killing 38 and injuring 300 people.Built in 1914, 23 Wall Street was known as the "JPMorgan Chase & Co." and for decades the bank's headquarters was the most important address in American finance. At noon, on September 16, 1920, a bomb exploded in front of the bank, killing 38 and injuring 300. Shortly before the bomb went off a warning note was placed in a mailbox at the corner of Cedar Street and Broadway. While theories abound about who was behind the Wall Street bombing and why they did it, after twenty years investigating the matter, the FBI rendered the file inactive in 1940 without ever finding the perpetrators. after the crash.1929 brought the "Wall Street Crash of 1929" of the stock market, ushering in the Great Depression. During this era, new development of the Financial District had stagnated. The construction of the World Trade Center was one of the few major projects undertaken during the last three quarters of the 20th century and, financially, it was never terribly successful. Some point to the fact that it was actually a government-funded project, constructed by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey of New York State and New Jersey with the intention of spurring economic development in downtown. All the tools necessary to international trade were to be housed in the complex. However, at the beginning much of the space remained vacant.

Nonetheless, some large and powerful firms did purchase space in the World Trade Center. Further, it attracted other powerful businesses to the immediate neighborhood. In some ways, it could be argued that the World Trade Center changed the nexus of the Financial District from Wall Street to the Trade Center complex. When the World Trade Center was destroyed in the September 11, 2001 attacks, it left somewhat of an architectural void as new developments since the 1970s had played off the complex aesthetically. The attacks, however, contributed to the loss of business on Wall Street, due to temporary-to-permanent relocation to New Jersey and further decentralization with establishments transferred to cities like Chicago and Boston.

Wall Street itself and the Financial District as a whole are crowded with highrises by any standard of measure. Further, the loss of the World Trade Center has actually spurred development in the Financial District on a scale that hasn't been seen in decades. This is in part due to tax incentives provided by the federal, state and local governments to encourage development. A new World Trade Center complex, centered on Daniel Liebeskind's Memory Foundations plan, is in the early stages of development and one building has already been replaced. The centerpiece to this plan is the tall Freedom Tower. New residential buildings are already sprouting up, and buildings that were previously office space are being converted to residential units, also benefiting from the tax incentives. Better access to the Financial District is planned in the form of a new commuter rail station and a new downtown transportation center centered on Fulton Street (Manhattan).

Wall Street today To say that a corporation is a "Wall Street company" today does not necessarily mean that the company is physically located on Wall Street. It more likely means that the firm deals with financial services; such a firm could be headquartered in many places across the globe. Today, much of Wall Street's workforce tends to be made up of professionals working in the fields of law or finance who work for medium- to large-sized corporations. Many of the nearby businesses are local companies and chain stores that cater to the tastes of professionals and to the needs of the workforce. Most people who work in the Financial District commute in from suburbs in Long Island, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and the lower Hudson Valley.

Wall Street's culture is often criticized as being rigid. This is a decades-old stereotype stemming from the Wall Street's establishment's protection of their interests, and the link to the White Anglo-Saxon Protestant establishment. More recent criticism has centered on structural problems and lack of a desire to change well-established habits. Wall Street's establishment resists government oversight and regulation. At the same time, New York City has a reputation as a very bureaucratic city, which makes entry into the neighborhood difficult or even impossible for middle class entrepreneurs.

Since the founding of the Federal Reserve banking system, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York in the Financial District has been the point where monetary policy in the United States is implemented (although it's decided in Washington, D.C. by the Federal Reserve Bank's Board of Governors). As such, New York State is today unique in that it's the only state that constitutes its own district of the Federal Reserve Banking system. This is perhaps partly owed to population distribution in the United States of the time, however. Until the 1960s, New York was the most populated state in the U.S.; it now ranks third, behind California and Texas. The NY Federal Reserve's president is the only regional Bank president with a permanent vote and is traditionally selected as its vice chairman. The bank has a gold vault 80 feet (25 m) beneath the street. This depository is the largest in the world, larger even than Fort Knox.

Buildings For a more complete list of buildings, see List of buildings in Lower Manhattan. Wall Street's architecture is generally rooted in the Gilded Age, though there are also some art deco influences in the neighborhood. Landmark buildings on Wall Street include Federal Hall, 14 Wall Street (Bankers Trust Company Building), 40 Wall Street (The Trump Building), and the New York Stock Exchange at the corner of Broad Street (Manhattan).

Personalities Over the years, certain persons associated with Wall Street have become famous, even legendary. Although their reputation is usually limited to members of the stock brokerage/banking community, several have gained national and international fame. Some earned their fame for their investment strategies, financing, reporting, legal or regulatory skills, while others are remembered for their greed. One of the most iconic representations of the market prosperity is the Charging Bull sculpture, by Arturo Di Modica. Representing the bull market economy, the sculpture was originally placed in front of the New York Stock Exchange, and subsequently moved to its current location in Bowling Green (New York City).

Cultural influence Wall Street vs. Main Street As a figure of speech contrasted to "Main Street," the term "Wall Street" can refer to big business interests against those of small business and the working or middle class. It is sometimes used more specifically to refer to research analysts, shareholders, and financial institutions such as investment banks. The idea of "Main Street" conjures up images of locally owned businesses and banks.While the phrase "Wall Street" is commonly used interchangeably with the phrase "Corporate America", it is also sometimes used in contrast to distinguish between the interests, culture, and lifestyles of investment banks and those of Fortune 500 industrial or service corporations.

Perceptions

The older skyscrapers often were built with elaborate facades; such elaborate aesthetics haven't been common in corporate architecture for decades. The World Trade Center, built in the 1970s, was very plain and utilitarian in comparison (the World Trade Center were often criticized as looking like two big boxes, despite their impressive height).

Wall Street, more than anything, represents financial and economic power. To Americans, Wall Street can sometimes represent elitism and power politics and cut-throat capitalism, but it also stirs feelings of pride about the market economy. Wall Street became the symbol of a country and economic system that many Americans see as having developed not through colonialism and plunder, but through trade, capitalism, and innovation. (Fraser 2005)

In literature and popular culture Herman Melville's classic short story Bartleby the Scrivener is subtitled A Story of Wall Street and provides an excellent portrayal of a kind and wealthy lawyer's struggle to reason with that which is unreasonable as he is pushed beyond his comfort zone to "feel" something real for humanity.

In William Faulkner's novel The Sound and the Fury, Jason Compson hits on other perceptions of Wall Street: after finding some of his stocks are doing poorly, he blames the Jews.

Wall Street was the subject of a 1970s pop song, "Wall Street Shuffle" by 10cc.

The film Wall Street (film) exemplifies many popular conceptions of Wall Street, being a tale of shady corporate dealings and insider trading. IMDb entry for Wall Street Retrieved 19 August 2006.

In Godzilla (1998 film), Godzilla walks down Wall Street after stomping through Fulton Fish Market.

In the Star Trek universe, the Ferengi, an ultra-capitalist race of extraterrestrial life in popular culture, regularly make religious pilgrimages to Wall Street (as it exists in that universe), since they value similar traits in other species.

In Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, the Sons of Liberty try to "unplug" Manhattan by setting off an EMP through a nuclear bomb inside Arsenal Gear over Wall Street, and in the ensuing chaos invade Manhattan, turning it into a republic, "Outer Heaven", to wage war against the illuminati group The Patriots.

Transport Because Wall Street was historically a commuter destination, it has seen much transportation infrastructure developed with it in mind. Today, the New York City subway has three stations at/under Wall Street itself:

Similar institutions The financial clout of Wall Street is most rivaled only by:

In North America, the nearest rivals are:

See also

References

Cited references

Bibliography



External links



 

Wall Street



 
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