Stock Market Liquidity and Macro-Liquidity Shocks: Evidence from the 2007-2009 Financial Crisis


Autoria(s): Florackis, Chris; Kontonikas, Alexandros; Kostakis, Alexandros
Data(s)

23/10/2013

23/10/2013

2013

Resumo

We develop an empirical framework that links micro-liquidity, macro-liquidity and stock prices. We provide evidence of a strong link between macro-liquidity shocks and the returns of UK stock portfolios constructed on the basis of micro-liquidity measures between 1999-2012. Specifically, macro-liquidity shocks, which are extracted on the meeting days of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee relative to market expectations embedded in 3-month LIBOR futures prices, are transmitted in a differential manner to the cross-section of liquidity-sorted portfolios, with liquid stocks playing the most active role. We also find that there is a significant increase in shares’ trading activity and a rather small increase in their trading cost on MPC meeting days. Finally, our results emphatically document that during the recent financial crisis the shocks-returns relationship has reversed its sign. Interest rate cuts during the crisis were perceived by market participants as a signal of deteriorating economic prospects and reinforced “flight to safety” trading.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10943/485

Publicador

University of Glasgow

Relação

SIRE DISCUSSION PAPER;SIRE-DP-2013-58

Palavras-Chave #Liquidity Shocks #Monetary Policy #Market Micro-Structure #Stock Returns
Tipo

Working Paper