Liquidity

Liquidity is the ability to quickly buy or sell an asset at the current market price without significantly affecting that price.

High liquidity — easy to execute a trade. Low liquidity — trade is difficult or will execute at an unfavorable price.


High Liquidity

Signs:

  • Narrow spread

  • Many orders in the order book

  • Large trading volumes

  • Fast order execution

Advantages:

  • Quick buy/sell

  • Price close to market

  • Minimal slippage

  • Easy to enter and exit


Low Liquidity

Signs:

  • Wide spread

  • Few orders in the order book

  • Small volumes

  • Slow execution

Problems:

  • Difficult to find a counterparty

  • Execution at worse price

  • High slippage

  • Your trade affects the market


How to Assess Liquidity

By spread:

Narrow spread = high liquidity

Wide spread = low liquidity

By order book depth:

Many orders = high liquidity

Few orders = low liquidity

By trading volumes:

High volumes = high liquidity

Low volumes = low liquidity


When Liquidity Changes

Trading time:

Active hours — liquidity is maximum, spreads are narrow

Night, weekends — liquidity drops, spreads widen

News:

Before news — participants exit, liquidity drops

After news — participants return

Volatility:

High volatility — liquidity may decrease

Low volatility — stable liquidity


How to Trade Considering Liquidity

On Highly Liquid Assets

  • Any strategies suitable

  • Scalping works well

  • Can trade large volumes

  • Suitable for beginners

On Low Liquidity Assets

Recommendations:

  • Trade smaller volumes

  • Use limit orders

  • Increase stop-loss

  • Avoid scalping

Pre-entry check:

  1. Current spread — narrow or wide?

  2. Order book depth — many orders?

  3. Trading volumes — actively traded?

  4. Time of day — active hours?


Liquidity and Slippage

Slippage — difference between expected execution price and actual price.

High liquidity → low slippage

Many orders at levels, execution at expected price.

Low liquidity → high slippage

Few orders at levels, order "slips" to next levels, average price worse than expected.

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