Abstract

This paper examines the impact of a set of common factors on liquidity variations in twelve Asian equity markets. The cross-market liquidity co-movements, i.e. liquidity commonality, represent an important dimension of capital market integration. I find that (1) liquidity variations in Asian equity markets are increasingly driven by the common factors. By 2009 and early 2010, the common factors account for 15% of daily liquidity variations in Asian emerging markets, and for 22% in Asian developed markets. (2) Volatility as a factor for liquidity commonality is at least as important as the cross-market average liquidity. It explains 12.4% of liquidity variations in Asian developed markets after the global financial crisis. (3) Regional factors affect local market liquidity through shocks in liquidity and volatility. U.S. and U.K. factors have little direct impact on Asian emerging markets. They affect liquidity in Asian developed markets mainly through volatility. The findings shed new light on the level of market integration in Asia and associated liquidity risks.

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