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What Is Liquidity and Why Is It Important?

Apr 01, 2021

 Understanding Liquidity

 
Well, it's not talking about how easy something is to pour into a glass...but that might actually help in visualizing what's being measured! 

Liquidity refers to how easily an asset or security can be converted into ready-to-use cash without affecting its market price. Or, in other words, it measures how easily something can be poured from the asset bottle into the cash glass without losing value.

 Liquidity is an important measure within the stock market, which has a generally high market liquidity compared to others like the real estate market. That means that the price a buyer offers tends to be pretty close to what the seller is willing to give it to them for. When the gap between what a seller wants for something and what the buyer wants to pay for it grows, the market becomes more illiquid. 

 The more liquid the market is, the easier and quicker it will be to sell your stocks without having to drop the price to make it more attractive. Some stocks are more liquid than others, with stocks that are traded frequently holding up better under market liquidity shocks. It's good to look into before investing.

And how do you know if a stock is liquid? Other than the  method mentioned before of looking at difference between what the buyer offers and what the seller is willing to take; one can see the demand for the stock. If there is enough people asking for it on a consistent basis then you can be sure that it is liquid enough for when you want to sell. 

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