An illiquid stock is stock in a company that does not trade actively. Because there is not a lot of interest in this stock it makes it hard to trade or sell for cash (liquidate).
Illiquid stocks are not good for a quick trade, and the buy and sell price are normally quite different due to low volume and lack of interest, whereas liquid stocks are traded in much higher volumes, and the buy and sell prices are closer with less spread.
When a firm is taken private, the stock cannot be bought or sold on the public exchange. This is called making the stocks illiquid.
yes
liquid assets
Some of the reasons maybe : A) its ongoing capital investment (in fixed assets / facilities) to take care of future growth is in excess of cash profits and reserves; B) its working capital requirements arising from growth requires more cash than provided by cash profits; C) it has huge debt repayment obligations which are a burden on its cash profits; D) it has large amounts stuck in illiquid and non-moving assets (for e.g. stock which is not moving or debtors / accounts receivables which are not being realised)
the answer is stock
illiquid means not liquid il means not + liquid = illiquid. :-)
When a firm is taken private, the stock cannot be bought or sold on the public exchange. This is called making the stocks illiquid.
inventory (i.e. stock) is an asset, not a cost. It is considered a current asset, however may be illiquid depending on the product
yes
Liquidity is the ability of the business to pay immediate debts. Cash at bank and cash in hand are perfect liquid assets. Debtors are near liquid and closing stock is an illiquid asset.
liquid assets
Z stocks are not allowed
Yes. Liquid is a noun and an adjective. (There is also a negative, illiquid, for some uses.)
No and Yes, Their are liquid and illiquid issues in both
It is safer to invest in liquid assets than illiquid ones because it is easier for an investor.
Some of the reasons maybe : A) its ongoing capital investment (in fixed assets / facilities) to take care of future growth is in excess of cash profits and reserves; B) its working capital requirements arising from growth requires more cash than provided by cash profits; C) it has huge debt repayment obligations which are a burden on its cash profits; D) it has large amounts stuck in illiquid and non-moving assets (for e.g. stock which is not moving or debtors / accounts receivables which are not being realised)
The word liquid is both a noun and its own adjective. Another adjective form is the negative, illiquid, meaning not convertable to cash.