Abstract

This paper conducts a horse-race of different liquidity proxies using dynamic asset allocation strategies to evaluate the short-horizon predictive ability of liquidity on monthly stock returns. We assess the economic value of the out-of-sample power of empirical models based on different liquidity measures and find three key results: liquidity timing leads to tangible economic gains; a risk-averse investor will pay a high performance fee to switch from a dynamic portfolio strategy based on various liquidity measures to one that conditions on the Zeros measure (Lesmond, Ogden, and Trzcinka, 1999); the Zeros measure outperforms other liquidity measures because of its robustness in extreme market conditions. These findings are stable over time and robust to controlling for existing market return predictors or considering risk-adjusted returns.

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hdl.handle.net/1765/50284
Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper Series
Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper Series
Erasmus School of Economics

Karstanje, D., Sojli, E., Tham, W. W., & van der Wel, M. (2013). Economic Valuation of Liquidity Timing (No. TI 13-156/IV/DSF64). Tinbergen Institute Discussion Paper Series (pp. 1–48). Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/1765/50284