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Asian Review of Financial Research, Vol., No..
pp.67~135
pp.67~135
Theory-Based Illiquidity and Asset Pricing
Tarun Chordia Goizueta Business School, Emory University, Atlanta, GA 30327.
Sahn-Wook Huh Faculty of Business, Brock University, St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada L2S 3A1.
Avanidhar Subrahmanyam The Anderson School, 110 Westwood Plaza, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1481.
Many proxies of illiquidity have been used in the literature that relates illiquidity to asset prices. These proxies have been motivated from an empirical standpoint. In this study, we approach liquidity estimation from a theoretical perspective. Our method explicitly recognizes the analytic dependence of illiquidity on more primitive drivers such as trading activity and information asymmetry. More specifically, we estimate illiquidity using structural formulae for Kyle¡¯s (1985) lambda for a comprehensive sample of NYSE/AMEX and NASDAQ stocks. The empirical results provide convincing evidence that theory-based estimates of illiquidity are priced in the cross-section of expected stock returns, even after accounting for risk factors, firm characteristics known to influence returns, and other illiquidity proxies prevalent in the literature.
Tarun Chordia
Sahn-Wook Huh
Avanidhar Subrahmanyam
Many proxies of illiquidity have been used in the literature that relates illiquidity to asset prices. These proxies have been motivated from an empirical standpoint. In this study, we approach liquidity estimation from a theoretical perspective. Our method explicitly recognizes the analytic dependence of illiquidity on more primitive drivers such as trading activity and information asymmetry. More specifically, we estimate illiquidity using structural formulae for Kyle¡¯s (1985) lambda for a comprehensive sample of NYSE/AMEX and NASDAQ stocks. The empirical results provide convincing evidence that theory-based estimates of illiquidity are priced in the cross-section of expected stock returns, even after accounting for risk factors, firm characteristics known to influence returns, and other illiquidity proxies prevalent in the literature.