Abstract:In the past, market depth was assumed to be consistent. A liquidity provider in New York could count on counterparties in London or Tokyo to step in if needed. But 2025 has revealed that liquidity is
In the past, market depth was assumed to be consistent. A liquidity provider in New York could count on counterparties in London or Tokyo to step in if needed. But 2025 has revealed that liquidity is fragmented, uneven, and increasingly dependent on structural participation rather than simple capital supply.
At FISG, we observe that participation has diverged by asset class, geography, and even intraday timing. Large-cap equities remain deep, while emerging-market FX and corporate bond markets show clear signs of thinning. Market-makers have become selective in deploying capital, often withdrawing during periods of stress or uncertainty. This is not cyclical; it is structural.
The consequences are stark. Price moves that would have been muted by broad participation now amplify dramatically. Volatility becomes reactive to small operational changes or minor headline events, and markets appear less predictable.
FISGs approach emphasizes depth monitoring. By tracking spreads, order-book liquidity, and cross-market funding, we provide early detection of thinning participation. This insight allows traders to act pre-emptively, rather than reactively, when liquidity vanishes.
Behaviorally, participants misread ease of execution for market resilience. The ability to trade large blocks without impact fosters complacency. When fragmentation occurs, panic replaces discipline. The lesson is universal: liquidity is a leading indicator, not a byproduct. Watching participation patterns gives foresight into market fragility far earlier than price charts ever could.
Modern markets are defined by fragmentation, structural constraints, and selective participation. In 2025, understanding where liquidity exists—and where it does not—is as critical as understanding valuation. Traders who measure depth objectively gain a decisive edge; those who rely solely on price are at risk of being caught in sudden, violent moves.