Abstract
This paper investigates the relation between stock liquidity and firm performance. The study shows that firms with liquid stocks have better performance as measured by the firm market-to-book ratio. This result is robust to the inclusion of industry or firm fixed effects, a control for idiosyncratic risk, a control for endogenous liquidity using two-stage least squares, and the use of alternative measures of liquidity. To identify the causal effect of liquidity on firm performance, we study an exogenous shock to liquidity—the decimalization of stock trading—and show that the increase in liquidity around decimalization improves firm performance. The causes of liquidity's beneficial effect are investigated:…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.93
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
1- PTProf Thomas NoeCorresponding
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Topics & keywords
- Market liquidity
- Liquidity premium
- Liquidity risk
- Accounting liquidity
- Liquidity crisis
- Monetary economics
- Business
- Market maker
- Reduced inequalities