This paper presents a liquidity-centered interpretation of markets and economic environments developed within the broader Wave Liquidity Redistribution Theory (WLRT) research program. The article argues that price should not be treated as the primary object of market analysis, but rather as one of the observable consequences of deeper structural processes occurring inside liquidity environments. The paper introduces liquidity as a structural property of an environment: its capacity to sustain exchange, absorb stress, redistribute flows, preserve continuity, and maintain stability under changing conditions. The work discusses hidden and partially observable liquidity, structural fragility, constrained transitions, environmental stability, and the methodological implications of analyzing complex systems under incomplete information. The article also explores practical implications of liquidity-centered analysis for: • financial markets,• businesses,• institutional systems,• banking,• insurance,• pension structures,• and broader economic coordination environments. WLRT is presented not as a deterministic forecasting system, but as a structural analytical framework for studying liquidity environments, fragility accumulation, redistribution dynamics, and systemic resilience under uncertainty. The paper further discusses the relationship between WLRT and later WaveCounter™ developments associated with constrained transition architectures and structural interpretation of partially observable liquidity systems.
Petr Popov (Sun,) studied this question.