@Article{mfj:639,
title={Trading Activity, Quoted Liquidity, and Stock Volatility},
author={Li Jiang and Lawrence Kryzanowski},
journal={Multinational Finance Journal},
volume={1},
number={3/3},
pages={199--227},
year=1997,
publisher={Multinational Finance Society; Global Business Publications},
url={http://www.mfsociety.org/../modules/modDashboard/uploadFiles/journals/MJ~618~p16slshvlm4q9ve41brp1li71b8a3.pdf}
keywords={volatility; volatility determinants; and market microstructure},
abstract={In this article, we examine dynamic relationships between volatility and
various microstructure measures of trade activity and quoted liquidity for each
component stock in the Toronto Stock Exchange 35 Index and for the Toronto
35 Index Participation Shares. When volatility is conditioned on number of
trades and quoted liquidity, trading volume provides no incremental
explanatory power. Thus, the number of trades appears to be a better proxy for
information flow. Furthermore, investigation into partitioned volume suggests
that the number of trades is more effective than the unexpected volume in
explaining volatility. Measures of quoted liquidity also play a significant role
in explaining intra day volatility. Bid-ask spreads and quote depth are
positively and negatively related to volatility, respectively. Consistent with the
lack of information signal, no trade outcomes are negatively related to volatility.},
}