liquidity

noun
/lɪkˈwɪdəti/

Etymology

From liquid + -ity, from Latin liquiditas. In their financial and economic senses, this and various associated terms all involve portraying assets figuratively as if they were liquids and solids, dissolving the solids with solvents, freezing and thawing, and so on.

  1. derived from liquiditas

Definitions

  1. The state or property of being liquid.

  2. The degree of which something is in high supply and demand, making it easily convertible…

    The degree of which something is in high supply and demand, making it easily convertible to cash.

  3. An asset's property of being able to be sold without affecting its value

    An asset's property of being able to be sold without affecting its value; the degree to which it can be easily converted into cash.

    • Some stocks are traded so rarely that they lack liquidity.
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. Availability of cash over short term

      Availability of cash over short term: ability to service short-term debt.

      • This is often phrased in terms of whether they are facing liquidity or solvency problems; but I think it’s better phrased in terms of the possibility of self-fulfilling crises, a la Obstfeld.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for liquidity. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA