Abstract

ABSTRACT We perform a comprehensive study of different illiquidity effects in the relatively illiquid Russian stock market. Over the period 2010–2020, we apply cross-sectional and time-series regressions using two low-frequency illiquidity proxies: the Amihud ratio and the invariance-implied ratio. The evidence suggests that implicit trading costs influence only the returns of small-capitalization stocks or low size double-sorted portfolios. The Amihud ratio overestimates the illiquidity premium for small-cap stocks as predicted by the invariance theory. However, we find that the effect is economically and statistically significant only in the time-series.

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