05822oam 22012134 450 991096180880332120251116163610.0978661284274097814623426621462342663978145275512014527551249781282842748128284274997814518720021451872003(CKB)3170000000055204(EBL)1608180(SSID)ssj0000941192(PQKBManifestationID)11525485(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000941192(PQKBWorkID)10963700(PQKB)11513327(OCoLC)650279547(IMF)WPIEE2009052(MiAaPQ)EBC1608180(IMF)WPIEA2009052WPIEA2009052(EXLCZ)99317000000005520420020129d2009 uf 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrGlobal Liquidity, Risk Premiums and Growth Opportunities /Gianni De Nicolo, Iryna Ivaschenko1st ed.Washington, D.C. :International Monetary Fund,2009.1 online resource (45 p.)IMF Working Papers"March 2009".9781451916355 1451916353 Includes bibliographical references.Cover Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; I. Introduction; II. Liquidity Indicators: Theory and Measurement; A. A simple model of liquidity; B. Measurement; III. Liquidity Indicators: Evidence; A. Data; B. Descriptive Statistics; 1. Global Liquidity Indicators; 2. G-7 Equity and Bond Liquidity Indicators; 3. Emerging Markets Liquidity Indicators: Latin America; 4. Emerging Markets Liquidity Indicators: Asia; 5. Emerging Markets Liquidity Indicators: Europe; 6. Liquidity Indicators: Mean and Standard Deviation; C. Dynamics and Co-Movements; 7. Liquidity Indicators: Trend Coefficients1. Fixed Effect Panel Regressions 2. Liquidity Indicators: Dynamics of Cross Sectional Variances; 8. Liquidity Indicators: Correlations; D. Systemic Liquidity Shocks; 9. Indicators of Global Systemic Liquidity Shocks; 3. Bi-variate VAR of Global Equity and Bond Systemic Liquidity Shocks; IV. Liquidity and bond premiums; A. Advanced Economies; 4. Government Bond Spreads and Liquidity: Advanced Economies; B. Emerging Economies; 5. EMBI Spreads and Liquidity: Emerging Economies; V. Liquidity and growth opportunities; 6. Price-Earning (PE) Ratios and Liquidity; VI. Conclusion; ReferencesFootnotesThis paper constructs new indicators of liquidity for equity, bond and money markets in major advanced and emerging market countries, documents their evolution and comovements, and assesses the extent to which such measures are determinants of selected spreads and proxy measures of countries' growth opportunities. Three main results obtain. First, there is evidence of an historical increase in market liquidity since the early 1990s, in part as a result of advances in international financial integration, but markets have been increasingly exposed to global systemic liquidity shocks. Second, liquidity indicators appear to be important determinants of bond spreads in advanced economies and EMBI spreads in emerging markets. Third, improvements in market liquidity have significant real effects, as liquidity indicators have a significant positive impact on proxy measures of countries' growth opportunities.IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ;No. 2009/052Liquidity (Economics)Risk managementEconomic developmentAsset and liability managementimfCapital marketimfEconomicsimfFinanceimfFinance: GeneralimfFinancial Aspects of Economic IntegrationimfFinancial marketsimfGeneral Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)imfInternational financeimfInternational Financial MarketsimfInternational liquidityimfInvestment DecisionsimfLiquidity indicatorsimfLiquidity managementimfLiquidityimfPortfolio ChoiceimfSecurities marketsimfStock exchangesimfStock marketsimfUnited StatesimfLiquidity (Economics)Risk management.Economic development.Asset and liability managementCapital marketEconomicsFinanceFinance: GeneralFinancial Aspects of Economic IntegrationFinancial marketsGeneral Financial Markets: General (includes Measurement and Data)International financeInternational Financial MarketsInternational liquidityInvestment DecisionsLiquidity indicatorsLiquidity managementLiquidityPortfolio ChoiceSecurities marketsStock exchangesStock markets332.1332.10688De Nicolo Gianni375199Ivaschenko Iryna1815677International Monetary Fund.Research Department.DcWaIMFBOOK9910961808803321Global Liquidity, Risk Premiums and Growth Opportunities4372512UNINA