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A fixation on liquidity is not healthy for financial markets

The need for liquidity is a mantra among those who organise and regulate the financial system. To say that a proposal will damage liquidity more or less stops further discussion.

But what is liquidity? When I reviewed UK equity markets for the government last year, most participants told me liquidity was best judged by the spread – the difference between what it would cost to buy and sell the same share simultaneously. But since this is not a transaction anyone is likely to make, this indicator made little sense. Others regarded the volume of trading as a measure of liquidity; but this led to the circular argument that trading was good because it encouraged trading, a perspective relevant for those who own exchanges but not for anyone else.

The quest for liquidity rests on an illusion. Banks tell their customers they can have their deposits back immediately, even though they could not if all did so at once. It is often suggested that this confidence trick makes banking unique – banks have a mysterious capacity to “create money”. But the same device is used in many other markets to create an appearance of availability that exceeds the underlying reality.

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約翰•凱

約翰•凱(John Kay)從1995年開始爲英國《金融時報》撰寫經濟和商業的專欄。他曾經任教於倫敦商學院和牛津大學。目前他在倫敦經濟學院擔任訪問學者。他有著非常輝煌的從商經歷,曾經創辦和壯大了一家諮詢公司,然後將其轉售。約翰•凱著述甚豐,其中包括《企業成功的基礎》(Foundations of Corporate Success, 1993)、《市場的真相》(The Truth about Markets, 2003)和近期的《金融投資指南》(The Long and the Short of It: finance and investment for normally intelligent people who are not in the industry)。

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