Liquidity and Market Efficiency: A Large Sample Study
Posted: 30 Sep 2008 Last revised: 27 Oct 2010
Date Written: February 20, 2010
Abstract
Chordia, Roll and Subrahmanyam (2008, hereafter CRS) examine short horizon return predictability from past order flows of large, actively traded NYSE firms across three tick size regimes and conclude that higher liquidity facilitates arbitrage trading which enhances market efficiency. We extend CRS to a comprehensive sample of all NYSE firms and examine the dynamics between liquidity and market efficiency during informational periods. Our results indicate that although all NYSE firms experience an overall improvement in market efficiency across periods of different tick size regimes, this improvement varies significantly across the portfolios of sample companies formed on the basis of trading frequency, market capitalization, and trading volume. After controlling for these factors, we further document a positive association between a continuous measure of liquidity and market efficiency, and show that this effect is amplified during periods that contain new information, as reflected in high adverse selection component of the bid-ask spread.
Keywords: Liquidity, return predictability, market efficiency, NYSE
JEL Classification: G10, G14
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation