Market Microstructure and Asset Pricing: On the Compensation for Illiquidity in Stock Returns

Abstract
Models of price formation in securities markets suggest that privately informed investors create significant illiquidity costs for uninformed investors, implying that the required rates of return should be higher for securities that are relatively illiquid. We investigate the empirical relation between monthly stock returns and measures of illiquity obtained from intraday data. We find a significant relation between required rates of return and these measures after adjusting for the Fama and French risk factors, and also after accounting for the effects of the stock price level. Author Keywords: Asset pricing; Market microstructure
Volume
Vol. 41, Issue 3
Page
441-464
Year
1996
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Investments
Investment Policy
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Pricing and Risk Evaluation Models
IRR
Publications
Journal of Financial Economics
Authors
Michael J Brennan
Avanidhar Subrahmanyam