Assets vs Liquidity - What's the difference?
assets | liquidity |
English plurals
(finance) Any property or object of value that one possesses, usually considered as applicable to the payment of one's debts.
(legal) Sufficient estate; property sufficient in the hands of an executor or heir to pay the debts or legacies of the testator or ancestor to satisfy claims against it.
Any goods or property properly available for the payment of a bankrupt's or a deceased person's obligations or debts.
(uncountable) The state or property of being liquid.
(economics, countable) An asset's property of being able to be sold without affecting its value; the degree to which it can be easily converted into cash.
(finance) Availability of cash over short term: ability to service short-term debt.
As nouns the difference between assets and liquidity
is that assets is while liquidity is (uncountable) the state or property of being liquid.assets
English
Noun
(head)- His assets are much greater than his liabilities.
liquidity
English
(wikipedia liquidity)Noun
- Some stocks are traded so rarely that they lack liquidity .