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Jul. 25, 2018


Contrary to most common theories that greater liquidity is necessarily better for financial markets overall, BGU researchers contend in a new paper that liquidity comes at a cost: It increases market risk. 

Prof. Haim Kedar-Levy of BGU's Department of Management and Prof. Shmuel Hauser of the Department of Business Administration in the Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management  presented their theory in “Liqu​idity might come at cost: The role of heterogeneous preferences" at the 25th Annual Conference of the Multinational Finance Society held in Budapest, Hungary. 

The financial literature contends that liquidity of specific assets, such as a stock, is an important and positive attribute that can reduce risk and add value. Kedar-Levy and Hauser agree with that assessment; however they say that the impact of liquidity on the whole market is different. 

“The model we developed is richer than the classic theory because, among other reasons, it takes into account a more realistic treatment of financial markets in which various investors have different investment strategies," the researchers say. “Investors differ in the amount of risk they are willing to assume, and therefore choose different proportions of investments in risky assets, such as equities." 

In this more realistic scenario, the study shows that the more liquid the market is, the more volatile the average appetite for risk becomes market wide. At reasonable risk appetite parameters, trading volume and liquidity peak across the whole stock market. When that occurs, there is a massive exchange of shares between investors with different risk appetites. This attribute causes the market price of risk (a.k.a. Sharpe ratio) to be highly volatile, and makes all stocks more risky. 

The Sharpe ratio measures how much excess return an investor is receiving for the extra volatility that he endures for holding a riskier asset. Investors need to be compensated for the additional risk vs. holding a risk-free asset, like cash. 

However, if the investors in the market are either very similar or very different in their appetites for risk, then trading volume and liquidity drop, and market risk declines, as well.

This is not to say that we favor less liquid markets over highly liquid ones, but we find that liquidity comes at a cost," the researchers say. “It is not a free attribute of stock markets." 

The study was published in the Journal of Financial Markets  as the leading article and awarded Best Paper out of about 300 papers last month. Prof. Hauser served as chairman of the Israel Securities Authority (ISA) from 2011 to 2018.


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