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Liquidity Risk
Liquidity risk is the risk that a position cannot be entered, exited, or adjusted at a reasonable price due to insufficient market depth or activity. In oil trading, liquidity risk varies significantly across benchmarks, tenors, and physical grades.
Even normally liquid markets can experience liquidity stress during extreme events, such as geopolitical disruptions or financial crises. Bid–ask spreads may widen, order books thin, and execution costs rise sharply.
Liquidity risk also interacts with leverage. Highly leveraged positions may need to be reduced quickly, but doing so in an illiquid market can exacerbate losses. This is particularly relevant near contract expiry or during roll periods.
Managing liquidity risk involves position sizing, instrument selection, diversification, and awareness of market microstructure. Professional traders treat liquidity as a dynamic variable rather than a fixed characteristic.