Abstract

Research background: Empirical market microstructure research has recently shifted its focus from the examination of liquidity of individual securities towards analyses of the common determinants and components of liquidity. The identification of commonality in liquidity emerged as a new and fast growing strand of the literature on liquidity. However, the results around the world are ambiguous and rather depend on a specific stock market.
 Purpose of the article: The aim of this study is to explore intra-market commonality in liquidity on the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE) by using daily proxies of six liquidity estimates: percentage relative spread, percentage realized spread, percentage price impact, percentage order ratio, modified turnover, and modified version of the Amihud measure. The sample covers a period from January 2005 to December 2016. The database contains the group of eighty-six WSE-listed companies.
 Methods: The research hypothesis that there is commonality in liquidity on the Polish stock market is tested. The OLS with the HAC covariance matrix estimation and the GARCH-type models are employed to infer the patterns of liquidity co-movements on the WSE. Moreover, because the sample period is quite long, the stability of the empirical results by time period is examined. Seven 6-year time windows are utilized in the study.
 Findings & Value added: The regression results reveal weak evidence of co-movements in liquidity on the WSE, regardless of the choice of the liquidity proxy. Furthermore, the robustness tests based on the time rolling-window approach do not unambiguously support the research hypothesis that there is commonality in liquidity on the Polish stock market. To the best of the author?s knowledge, the empirical findings presented here are novel and have not been reported in the literature thus far.

Highlights

  • Empirical market microstructure research has recently shifted its focus from the examination of liquidity of individual securities towards analyses of the common determinants and components of liquidity

  • Commonality in liquidity means that financial asset liquidity changes over time, and that these time variations are at least partly determined by a significant common component in the liquidity across assets

  • The main goal of this paper was to explore and document commonality in liquidity patterns on the Warsaw Stock Exchange (WSE), using six alternative liquidity proxies based on intraday or daily data for a broad sample of stocks

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Summary

Introduction

Empirical market microstructure research has recently shifted its focus from the examination of liquidity of individual securities towards analyses of the common determinants and components of liquidity. Using transactions data for the NYSE during 1992 and five measures of liquidity, the authors regressed individual stock daily percentage changes in liquidity on market and industry liquidity. Their results revealed that firm-level liquidity was significantly influenced by both a market and an industry-wide liquidity component. Commonality in liquidity means that financial asset liquidity changes over time, and that these time variations are at least partly determined by a significant common component in the liquidity across assets. This phenomenon indicates that individual firm liquidity is sensitive to changes in aggregate liquidity. The existence of commonality in liquidity has important implications for asset pricing since it could represent a source of non-diversifiable risk (Olbryś, 2014)

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