Understanding Liquidity Risk (2024)

Before the global financial crisis (GFC), liquidity risk was not on everybody's radar. Financial models routinely omitted liquidity risk. But the GFC prompted a renewal to understand liquidity risk. One reason was a consensus that the crisis included a run on the non-depository, shadow banking system—providers of short-term financing, notably in the repo market—systematically withdrew liquidity. They did this indirectly but undeniably by increasing collateral haircuts.

After the GFC, all major financial institutions and governments are acutely aware of the risk that liquidity withdrawal can be a nasty accomplice in transmitting shocks through the system—or even exacerbating contagion.

Key Takeaways

  • Liquidity is how easily an asset or security can be bought or sold in the market, and converted to cash.
  • There are two different types of liquidity risk: Funding liquidity and market liquidity risk.
  • Funding or cash flow liquidity risk is the chief concern of a corporate treasurer who asks whether the firm can fund its liabilities.
  • Market or asset liquidity risk is assetilliquidity or the inability to easily exit a position.
  • The most popular and crudest measure of liquidity is thebid-ask spread—a low or narrow bid-ask spread is said to be tight and tends to reflect a moreliquid market.

What Is Liquidity Risk?

Liquidity is a term used to refer to how easily an asset or security can be bought or sold in the market. It basically describes how quickly something can be converted to cash. There are two different types of liquidity risk. The first is funding liquidity or cash flow risk, while the second is market liquidity risk, also referred to as asset/product risk.

Funding Liquidity Risk

Funding or cash flow liquidity risk is the chief concern of a corporate treasurer who asks whether the firm can fund its liabilities. A classic indicator of funding liquidity risk is the current ratio (current assets/current liabilities) or, for that matter, the quick ratio. A line of credit would be a classic mitigant.

Market Liquidity Risk

Market or asset liquidity risk is asset illiquidity. This is the inability to easily exit a position. For example, we may own real estate but, owing to bad market conditions, it can only be sold imminently at a fire sale price. The asset surely has value, but as buyers have temporarily evaporated, the value cannot be realized.

Consider its virtual opposite, a U.S. Treasury bond. True, a U.S. Treasury bond is considered almost risk-free as few imagine the U.S. government will default. But additionally, this bond has extremely low liquidity risk. Its owner can easily exit the position at the prevailing market price. Small positions in S&P 500 stocks are similarly liquid. They can be quickly exited at the market price. But positions in many other asset classes, especially in alternative assets, cannot be exited with ease. In fact, we might even define alternative assets as those with high liquidity risk.

Market liquidity risk can be a function of the following:

  • The market microstructure. Exchanges such as commodity futures are typically deep markets, but many over-the-counter (OTC) markets are thin.
  • Asset type. Simple assets are more liquid than complex assets. For example, in the crisis, CDOs-squared—CDO2 are structured notes collateralized by CDO tranches—became especially illiquid due to their complexity.
  • Substitution. If a position can be easily replaced with another instrument, the substitution costs are low and the liquidity tends to be higher.
  • Time horizon. If the seller has urgency, this tends to exacerbate the liquidity risk. If a seller is patient, then liquidity risk is less of a threat.

Note the common feature of both types of liquidity risk: In a sense, they both involve the fact that there's not enough time. Illiquidity is generally a problem that can be solved with more time.

Understanding Liquidity Risk (1)

Measures of Market Liquidity Risk

There are at least three perspectives on market liquidity as per the above figure. The most popular and crudest measure is the bid-ask spread. This is also called width. A low or narrow bid-ask spread is said to be tight and tends to reflect a more liquid market.

Depth refers to the ability of the market to absorb the sale or exit of a position. An individual investor who sells shares of Apple, for example, is not likely to impact the share price. On the other hand, an institutional investor selling a large block of shares in a small capitalization company will probably cause the price to fall. Finally, resiliency refers to the market's ability to bounce back from temporarily incorrect prices.

To summarize:

  • The bid-ask spread measures liquidity in the price dimension and is a feature of the market, not the seller or the seller's position. Financial models that incorporate the bid-ask spread adjust for exogenous liquidity and are exogenous liquidity models.
  • Position size, relative to the market, is a feature of the seller. Models that use this measure liquidity in the quantity dimension and are generally known as endogenous liquidity models.
  • Resiliency measures liquidity in the time dimensions and such models are currently rare.

At one extreme, high market liquidity would be characterized by the owner of a small position relative to a deep market that exits into a tight bid-ask spread and a highly resilient market.

A low or narrow bid-ask spread is said to be tight and tends to reflect a more liquid market.

What About Volume?

Trading volume is a popular measure of liquidity but is now considered to be a flawed indicator. High trading volume does not necessarily imply high liquidity. The Flash Crash of May 6, 2010, proved this with painful, concrete examples.

In that case, according to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), sell algorithms were feeding orders into the system faster than they could be executed. Volume jumped, but many backlog orders were not filled. According to the SEC, "especially in times of significant volatility, high trading volume is not necessarily a reliable indicator of market liquidity."

Incorporating Liquidity Risk

In the case of exogenous liquidity risk, one approach is to use the bid-ask spread to directly adjust the metric. Please note: Risk models are different than valuation models and this method assumes there are observable bid/ask prices.

Let's illustrate with value-at-risk (VAR). Assume the daily volatility of a $1,000,000 position is 1.0%. The position has positive expected return, also referred to as drift, but as our horizon is daily, we bring our tiny daily expected return down to zero. This is a common practice. So let the expected daily return equal zero. If the returns are normally distributed, then the one-tailed deviate at 5.0% is 1.65. That is, the 5% left tail of normal distribution is 1.65 standard deviations to the left of mean. In excel, we get this result with =NORM.S.INV(5%) = -1.645.

The 95% value at risk (VAR) is given by:

$1,000,000 * 1.0% volatility * 1.65 = $16,500

Under these assumptions, we can say "only 1/20 days (5% of the time) do we expect the daily loss to exceed $16,500." But this does not adjust for liquidity.

Let's assume the position is in a single stock where the ask price is $20.40 and the bid price is $19.60, with a midpoint of $20. In percentage terms the spread (%) is:

($20.40 - $19.60) ÷ $20 = 4.0%

The full spread represents the cost of a round trip: Buying and selling the stock. But, as we are only interested in the liquidity cost if we need to exit (sell) the position, the liquidity adjustment consists of adding one-half (0.5) the spread. In the case of VaR, we have:

  • Liquidity cost (LC) = 0.5 x spread
  • Liquidity-adjusted VaR (LVaR) = position ($) * [-drift (%) + volatility *deviate + LC], or
  • Liquidity-adjusted VaR (LVaR) = position ($) * [-drift (%) + volatility *deviate + 0.5 * spread].

In our example,

LVaR = $1,000,000 * [-0% + 1.0% * 1.65 + 0.5 * 4.0%] = $36,500

In this way, the liquidity adjustment increases the VaR by one-half the spread ($1,000,000 * 2% = +$20,000).

The Bottom Line

Liquidity risk can be parsed into funding (cash-flow) or market (asset) liquidity risk. Funding liquidity tends to manifest as credit risk, or the inability to fund liabilities produces defaults. Market liquidity risk manifests as market risk, or the inability to sell an asset drives its market price down, or worse, renders the market price indecipherable. Market liquidity risk is a problem created by the interaction of the seller and buyers in the marketplace. If the seller's position is large relative to the market, this is called endogenous liquidity risk (a feature of the seller). If the marketplace has withdrawn buyers, this is called exogenous liquidity risk—a characteristic of the market which is a collection of buyers—a typical indicator here is an abnormally wide bid-ask spread.

A common way to include market liquidity risk in a financial risk model (not necessarily a valuation model) is to adjust or "penalize" the measure by adding/subtracting one-half the bid-ask spread.

Understanding Liquidity Risk (2024)

FAQs

How do you explain liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity risk is the risk of loss resulting from the inability to meet payment obligations in full and on time when they become due. Liquidity risk is inherent to the Bank's business and results from the mismatch in maturities between assets and liabilities.

How to study liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity risks are measured by way of the current ratio. It takes all of the entity's current assets and divides them by its current liabilities.

What are the three types of liquidity risk? ›

The three main types are central bank liquidity, market liquidity and funding liquidity.

What are the key risk indicators for liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity Risk Indicators: Low levels of cash reserves, high dependency on short-term funding, or a high ratio of loans to deposits can hint at liquidity risk.

What is liquidity for dummies? ›

What Is Liquidity? Liquidity refers to the efficiency or ease with which an asset or security can be converted into ready cash without affecting its market price. The most liquid asset of all is cash itself.

What is the root cause of liquidity risk? ›

Individuals face heightened liquidity risk when they lack adequate emergency savings, rely on accessing long-term assets like home equity to fund short-term spending needs, over-utilize credit lines and cards, or have an excessive debt service burden relative to income.

How do you fix liquidity risk? ›

How Do I Mitigate Liquidity Risk?
  1. Buy into the mantra that “cash is king.” It may be a cliché but it's proven to be true time and again. Constantly forecast the cash that is coming in and going out while managing any spikes and dips. ...
  2. Diversify financial institutions. ...
  3. Stay on top of best practices.
Jul 20, 2023

What is the best way to assess liquidity? ›

The current ratio is the simplest liquidity ratio to calculate and interpret. Anyone can easily find the current assets and current liabilities line items on a company's balance sheet. Divide current assets by current liabilities, and you will arrive at the current ratio.

Which tool is used to manage liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity management tools—such as pricing arrangements, notice periods and suspension of redemption rights—can help alleviate the liquidity risk generated by investment funds.

Which asset has the highest liquidity risk? ›

Stocks of small and mid-cap companies have high market liquidity risk, as stated above. This is because buyers are uncertain of their potential growth in the future and hence, are unwilling to purchase such securities in fear of incurring losses in the long term.

Who is most affected by liquidity risk? ›

The fundamental role of banks typically involves the transfor- mation of liquid deposit liabilities into illiquid assets such as loans; this makes banks inherently vulnerable to liquidity risk. Liquidity-risk management seeks to ensure a bank's ability to continue to perform this fundamental role.

What is another name for liquidity risk? ›

There are two different types of liquidity risk. The first is funding liquidity or cash flow risk, while the second is market liquidity risk, also referred to as asset/product risk.

How do you analyze liquidity risk? ›

How do we measure liquidity risk?
  1. Indicates a company's ability to meet upcoming debt payments with the most liquid part of its assets (cash on hand and short-term investments).
  2. It is the ratio between current assets (liquid resources of the company) and current liabilities (short-term debts).

What is a real life example of liquidity risk? ›

For example, the risk of liquidity would be high if a large market trade is done over a short period of time in an insufficiently liquid market. A real-life example is the 2008 financial crisis. During this financial crisis, many large central banks and foreign banks failed or faced insolvency issues.

What best describes liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity risk is defined as the risk that the Group has insufficient financial resources to meet its commitments as they fall due, or can only secure them at excessive cost. Liquidity risk is managed through a series of measures, tests and reports that are primarily based on contractual maturity.

Which one of these best defines liquidity risk? ›

Liquidity risk is the possibility that an asset's price must be lowered below fair market value in order to sell the asset on short notice.

What is an example of a liquidity problem? ›

A liquidity crisis occurs when a company can no longer finance its current liabilities from its available cash. For example, it is no longer able to pay its bills on time and therefore defaults on payments. In order to avoid insolvency, it must be able to obtain cash as quickly as possible in such a case.

Why is liquidity risk bad? ›

Market liquidity risk

When market liquidity begins to falter, financial markets experience less reliable pricing, and can tend to overreact. This has a knock-on effect, leading to an increase in market volatility and higher funding costs.

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