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A practical guide to liquidity risk, explaining its causes, impacts, and mitigation strategies.
Liquidity Risk is the risk that a company, financial institution, or investor will be unable to meet short-term financial obligations when they fall due, without incurring significant losses. It arises when assets cannot be quickly converted into cash or when funding sources dry up.
Definition
Liquidity Risk is the possibility that an entity will not have sufficient liquid resources to meet its immediate financial commitments.
Liquidity risk stems from mismatches between cash inflows and outflows. Even companies with strong balance sheets can face liquidity risk if revenues are delayed while expenses remain fixed.
There are two main dimensions of liquidity risk: the inability to sell assets quickly at fair value (market liquidity risk) and the inability to obtain funding when needed (funding liquidity risk).
Effective liquidity risk management involves cash flow forecasting, maintaining reserves, diversifying funding sources, and stress testing.
Liquidity risk is monitored using indicators such as:
Liquidity risk is critical because it:
Yes, profitability does not guarantee available cash.
Through reserves, liquidity ratios, and central bank facilities.
No. Liquidity risk is short-term; solvency risk is long-term.