We hypothesize and test an inverse relationship between liquidity and price volatility
derived from microstructure theory. Two important facets of liquidity trading are
examined: thickness and noisiness. As represented by expected volume (thickness) and
realized average commission cost per share (noisiness) of NYSE equity trading, both
facets are found negatively associated with ex post and ex ante price volatilities of the
NYSE stock portfolios and the NYSE composite index futures. Furthermore, the inverse
association between volatility and noisiness is amplified in times of market crisis. The
overall results demonstrate that volatility increases as noise trading declines. All findings
retain statistical significance and materiality after controlling for a number of
specifications. This inverse liquidity-volatility relationship reflects a microstructure
interpretation of the liquidity risk premium documented in the asset pricing literature.
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