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Volume 27, Number 2, 2005 of the Journal of Real Estate Research

Intraday REIT Liquidity

Professor William Bertin

Department of Finance, School of Business

Bond University

Gold Coast, QLD

Australia 4229

E-mail: wbertin@bond.edu.au

 

Professor Paul Kofman

Department of Finance

Faculty of Economics and Commerce

The University of Melbourne

Parkville, Victoria 3010, Australia

E-mail: pkofman@unimelb.edu.au

Professor David Michayluk*

College of Business Administration

206 Ballentine Hall

University of Rhode Island

Kingston, RI  02818

E-mail: dave@uri.edu

*Corresponding author

Professor Laurie Prather

Department of Finance

School of Business

Bond University

Gold Coast, QLD

Australia 4229

E-mail: lprather@bond.edu.au

 

Abstract: This study measures and analyzes the liquidity differences between Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) and other common stocks. The intraday variations documented in this study have implications for the appropriate timing of trades to minimize transaction costs and the substitutability of investments if illiquidity is priced. The findings reveal intraday patterns indicating lower liquidity for REITs than for common stocks when the liquidity measure is friction-based. In contrast, activity measures exhibit higher liquidity levels for REITs than for common stocks but this difference is only statistically significant at the beginning of the trading day. The findings also indicate that the ability to trade without influencing prices is 15%–25% greater for non-REITS compared to REITs, and the price of immediacy is 7% higher for REITs.

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