#CircleIPO Liquidity 101 refers to the basic understanding of liquidity in financial contexts. Here's a simple breakdown:

🔹 What is Liquidity?

Liquidity is how easily and quickly an asset can be converted into cash without significantly affecting its price.

🔹 Types of Liquidity

Market Liquidity

Refers to the ease of buying or selling assets in a market.

Highly liquid markets: stocks of large companies, forex.

Illiquid markets: rare collectibles, real estate.

Accounting (or Balance Sheet) Liquidity

Refers to a company’s ability to meet short-term obligations using its liquid assets.

Common ratios:

Current Ratio = Current Assets / Current Liabilities

Quick Ratio = (Current Assets - Inventory) / Current Liabilities

🔹 Examples of Liquid Assets

Highly liquid: Cash, checking accounts, publicly traded stocks.

Less liquid: Real estate, equipment, art.

Illiquid: Private equity, complex financial derivatives.

🔹 Why Liquidity Matters

For individuals: You want to ensure you can access cash in emergencies.

For businesses: Sufficient liquidity is critical to avoid defaulting on obligations.

For markets: Liquidity affects volatility and pricing efficiency.

🔹 Risks of Low Liquidity

Can't sell quickly without a loss.

Can lead to a liquidity crisis if many parties want to exit positions at once (e.g., 2008 financial crisis).

If you'd like a deeper dive into liquidity ratios, central bank liquidity injections, or crypto liquidity pools, let me know!