July 2019

When do low-frequency measures really measure transaction costs?

Mohammad R. Jahan-Parvar and Filip Zikes

Abstract:

We compare popular measures of transaction costs based on daily data with their high-frequency data-based counterparts. We find that for U.S. equities and major foreign exchange rates, (i) the measures based on daily data are highly upward biased and imprecise; (ii) the bias is a function of volatility; and (iii) it is primarily volatility that drives the dynamics of these liquidity proxies both in the cross section as well as over time. We corroborate our results in carefully designed simulations and show that such distortions arise when the true transaction costs are small relative to volatility. Many financial assets exhibit this property, not only in the last two decades, but also in the previous century. We document that using low-frequency measures as liquidity proxies in standard asset pricing tests may produce sizable biases and spurious inferences about the pricing of aggregate volatility or liquidity risk.

Accessible materials (.zip)

Keywords: Liquidity Risk, Transaction Costs, Volatility

DOI: https://doi.org/10.17016/FEDS.2019.051

PDF: Full Paper

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Last Update: January 09, 2020