Liquidity vs Cashflow - What's the difference?
liquidity | cashflow |
(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.
Of or pertaining to a cash flow
* {{quote-news, 2009, January 30, , Coffey International confident of record result, Herald Sun
, passage="Net debt at 31 December 2008 has reduced under $92 million on the back of strong operating cashflows due to substantial growth in revenue." }}
* {{quote-news, 2008, December 29, Richard Wray, RBS to abandon sale of Direct Line and Churchill, The Guardian (UK)
, passage="The bank's domestic insurance businesses are more valuable to him, not least because they generate substantial cashflows ." }}
As nouns the difference between liquidity and cashflow
is that liquidity is the state or property of being liquid while cashflow is alternative form of lang=en.As an adjective cashflow is
of or pertaining to a cash flow.liquidity
English
(wikipedia liquidity)Noun
- Some stocks are traded so rarely that they lack liquidity .
Antonyms
* illiquiditycashflow
English
Adjective
(-)Noun
(en noun)citation
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