Do market frictions influence asset prices? The first part examines whether financial intermediaries’ balance sheet capacity, their funding liquidity, can influence market liquidity, volatility, and price patterns. Using a historical case study this part suggests that when a liquidity provider is balance sheet constrained, markets become illiquid and prices move. The second part looks at Germany’s 1927 stock market crash. It sheds light on the relationship between leverage and asset price behavior. The results indicate that a bank’s credit policy influenced asset prices – an expansive policy dampened volatility and increased returns. A sharp cut in margin credit led to larger price fluctuations. The third part looks at the connection betwee...