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Volume 27, Number 1, 2025
Volume 27, Number 1, 2025
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Home / Archives / All Issues / Volume 26, Number 3, 2024
Volume 26, Number 3, 2024 << Back
Journal of Economics and Development, Vol. 26 No. 3, pp. 174-188. https://doi.org/10.1108/JED-09-2023-0177

Stock price crash risk, liquidity and institutional blockholders: evidence from Vietnam

Hang Thu Nguyen, Hao Thi Nhu Nguyen

Abstract:
Purpose
This study examines the influence of stock liquidity on stock price crash risk and the moderating role of institutional blockholders in Vietnam’s stock market.

Design/methodology/approach
Crash risk is measured by the negative coefficient of skewness of firm-specific weekly returns (NCSKEW) and the down-to-up volatility of firm-specific weekly stock returns (DUVOL). Liquidity is measured by adjusted Amihud illiquidity. The two-stage least squares method is used to address endogeneity issues.

Findings
Using firm-level data from Vietnam, we find that crash risk increases with stock liquidity. The relationship is stronger in firms owned by institutional blockholders. Moreover, intensive selling by institutional blockholders in the future will positively moderate the relationship between liquidity and crash risk.

Practical implications
Since stock liquidity could exacerbate crash risk through institutional blockholder trading, firm managers should avoid bad news accumulation and practice timely information disclosures. Investors should be mindful of the risk associated with liquidity and blockholder trading.

Originality/value
We contribute to the literature by showing that the activities of blockholders could partly explain the relationship between liquidity and crash risk. High liquidity encourages blockholders to exit upon receiving private bad news.

Keywords:Stock liquidity, Crash risk, Institutional ownership, Blockholder, Vietnam
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