Secondary Liquidity

Author Topic: Secondary Liquidity  (Read 1137 times)

Offline munna99185

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Secondary Liquidity
« on: May 23, 2014, 02:39:19 PM »
Secondary Liquidity is a form of liquidity that is part of an initial public offering when shares are distributed to both retail and institutional players. These secondary parties may then sell the security to other interested buyers, with an exchange typically acting as an intermediary. Secondary holders, or liquidity providers, often hold fewer shares and provide less liquidity and/or share volume than the initial underwriter. When a stock or bond is traded in the secondary market, it falls into a number of different hands, both retail and institutional. These holders often have fewer shares than their underwriter counterparts. Furthermore, while they offer investors a valuable source for shares, the liquidity providers are almost always less liquid then underwriters, which may retain a large portion of the initial offering for long-term investment.
[Source: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/s/secondaryliquidity.asp]


Sayed Farrukh Ahmed
Assistant Professor
Faculty of Business & Economics
Daffodil International University