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FOLLOWING NEWS
RANGE TRADING
TREND TRADING
SCALPING
COMMODITY FUTURES
LEVERAGE
CURRENCY BAND
EXCHANGE RATES
FLOATING EXCHANGE RATE
FIXED EXCHANGE RATE
LINKED EXCHANGE RATE
CURRENCY SWAP
LIQUIDITY
MARKET SPECULATORS
LIQUIDITY
Market liquidity is a business, economics or
investment term that refers to an asset's ability to be easily converted through
an act of buying or selling without causing a significant movement in the price
and with minimum loss of value. Money, or cash on hand, is the most liquid
asset. An act of exchange of a less liquid asset with a more liquid asset is
called liquidation. Liquidity also refers to a business' ability to meet its
payment obligations, in terms of possessing sufficient liquid assets, and to
such assets themselves. A liquid asset has some or more of the following
features. It can be sold rapidly, with minimal loss of value, any time within
market hours. The essential characteristic of a liquid market is that there are
ready and willing buyers and sellers at all times. Another elegant definition of
liquidity is the probability that the next trade is executed at a price equal to
the last one. A market may be considered deeply liquid if there are ready and
willing buyers and sellers in large quantities. This is related to a market
depth, where sometimes orders cannot strongly influence prices.
An
illiquid asset is an asset which is not readily saleable due to uncertainty
about its value or lacking a market in which it is regularly traded.[2] The
mortgage related assets which resulted in the subprime mortgage crisis are
examples of illiquid assets as their value is not readily determinable despite
being secured by real property. Another example is an asset such as large block
of stock, the sale of which affects the market value.
The liquidity of a
product can be measured as how often it is bought and sold; this is known as
volume. Often investments in liquid markets such as the stock exchange or
futures markets are considered to be more liquid than investments such as real
estate, based on their ability to be converted quickly. Some assets with liquid
secondary markets may be more advantageous to own, so buyers are willing to pay
a higher price for the asset than for comparable assets without a liquid
secondary market. The liquidity discount is the reduced promised yield or
expected return for such assets, like the difference between newly issued U.S.
Treasury bonds compared to off-the-run treasuries with the same term remaining
until maturity. Buyers know that other investors are not willing to buy
off-the-run so the newly issued bonds have a lower yield and higher price.
Speculators and market makers are key contributors to the liquidity of a market,
or asset. Speculators and market makers are individuals or institutions that
seek to profit from anticipated increases or decreases in a particular market
price. By doing this, they provide the capital needed to facilitate the
liquidity. The risk of illiquidity need not apply only to individual
investments: whole portfolios are subject to market risk. Financial institutions
and asset managers that oversee portfolios are subject to what is called
"structural" and "contingent" liquidity risk. Structural liquidity risk,
sometimes called funding liquidity risk, is the risk associated with funding
asset portfolios in the normal course of business. Contingent liquidity risk is
the risk associated with finding additional funds or replacing maturing
liabilities under potential, future stressed market conditions. When a central
bank tries to influence the liquidity (supply) of money, this process is known
as open market operations. In the futures markets, there is no assurance that
a liquid market may exist for offsetting a commodity contract at all times. Some
futures contracts and specific delivery months tend to have increasingly more
trading activity and have higher liquidity than others. The most useful
indicators of liquidity for these contracts are the trading volume and open
interest. There is also dark liquidity, referring to transactions that occur
off-exchange and are therefore not visible to investors until after the
transaction is complete.
MARKET SPECULATORS
In finance,
speculation is a financial action that does not promise safety of the initial
investment along with the return on the principal sum. Speculation typically
involves the lending of money or the purchase of assets, equity or debt but in a
manner that has not been given thorough analysis or is deemed to have low margin
of safety or a significant risk of the loss of the principal investment.
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