TASE or tase can mean:
Coordinates: 32°3′52.38″N 34°46′13.11″E / 32.0645500°N 34.7703083°E
The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange (TASE; Hebrew: הבורסה לניירות ערך בתל אביב; colloquially known as The Bursa or הבורסה) in Tel Aviv is Israel's only public stock exchange.
TASE plays a major role in the Israeli economy. TASE lists some 473 companies, about 47 of which are also listed on stock exchanges in other countries. TASE also lists some 180 exchange-traded funds (ETFs), 60 government bonds, 500 corporate bonds, 591 Exchange traded notes (ETN's)
and more than 1000 mutual funds.
In 2009, the trading day was set at 9:30 AM–4:30 PM. At a news conference in December 2012, CEO Ester Levanon announced that trading would be extended by an hour to bring working hours closer to those of the European market. Since June 2013, the trading day has been 9:30 AM–4:30 PM on Sundays and 9:30 AM–5:30 PM Monday to Thursday.
The precursor to the TASE was the Exchange Bureau for Securities, founded by the Anglo-Palestine Bank (which became Bank Leumi) in 1935. With rapid growth of the Israeli economy after the founding of the state, a formal stock exchange was incorporated and began operations in Tel Aviv in 1953. In 1983 the exchange moved to Ahad Ha'am Street in Tel Aviv, where it remained for over 30 years, until it moved to its current location in 2014.
A typical national power grid includes a hierarchy of control centres to manage the generation, transmission, and distribution of power throughput the grid:
Prior to the development of electronics and telecommunications networks all co-ordination between control centres was carried out by telephone. However, the development of SCADA (supervisory control and data acquisition) systems allowed remote control and monitoring of electrical plant from centralised control centres.