scholarly journals IMPACT OF OIL PRICE VOLATILITY ON THE VOLATILITY OF THE TRADING VOLUME OF THE NIGERIAN CAPITAL MARKET

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (10) ◽  
Author(s):  
ELIAS IGWEBUIKE AGBO
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8393
Author(s):  
Congxin Wu ◽  
Xinyu Wang ◽  
Shan Luo ◽  
Jing Shan ◽  
Feng Wang

This article takes into account the form of mixed data as well as the peak and thick tail characteristics contained in the data characteristics, expands the GARCH-MIDAS (Generalized Autoregressive Conditional Heteroskedasticity-Mixed Data Sampling) model, establishes a new GARCH-MIDAS model with the residual term of the skewed-t distribution, and analyzes the influence factors of crude oil futures price volatility, which can better explain the changing laws of crude oil price volatility. The results show the following: First, the low-frequency factors include crude oil production, consumption, inventory, and natural gas spot price, and the high-frequency factors include on-market trading volume and off-market spot price, which can significantly explain the volatility of oil price. Second, low-frequency factors include crude oil inventory, consumption, crude oil production, and speculative factors, and high-frequency factors include crude oil spot price and substitute prices. The increase in the volatility of trading volume is significantly positively correlated with oil price volatility, and the overall volatility model outperforms the horizontal effect model. Third, from the perspective of the combined effect of a single factor level and volatility, we find that supply and demand are the low-frequency factors; the trading volume of on-market factors, natural gas price, and crude oil spot price of off-market factors, among the high-frequency factors, are the most important factors affecting oil price volatility. Fourth, from the perspective of high-frequency and low-frequency effects combined, there is no significant difference between the various factor models, which shows that the mixed effect model of high and low frequency models has advantages in terms of the stability of the estimation results.


Author(s):  
Shri Dewi Applanaidu ◽  
Mukhriz Izraf Azman Aziz

Objective - This study analyzes the dynamic relationship between crude oil price and food security related variables (crude palm oil price, exchange rate, food import, food price index, food production index, income per capita and government development expenditure) in Malaysia using a Vector Auto Regressive (VAR) model. Methodology/Technique - The data covered the period of 1980-2014. Impulse response functions (IRFs) was applied to examine what will be the results of crude oil price changes to the variables in the model. To explore the impact of variation in crude oil prices on the selected food security related variables forecast error variance decomposition (VDC) was employed. Findings - Findings from IRFs suggest there are positive effects of oil price changes on food import and food price index. The VDC analyses suggest that crude oil price changes have relatively largest impact on real crude palm oil price, food import and food price index. This study would suggest to revisiting the formulation of food price policy by including appropriate weight of crude oil price volatility. In terms of crude oil palm price determination, the volatility of crude oil prices should be taken into account. Overdependence on food imports also needs to be reduced. Novelty - As the largest response of crude oil price volatility on related food security variables food vouchers can be implemented. Food vouchers have advantages compared to direct cash transfers since it can be targeted and can be restricted to certain types of products and group of people. Hence, it can act as a better aid compared cash transfers. Type of Paper - Empirical Keywords: Crude oil price, Food security related variables, IRF, VAR, VDC


Author(s):  
Sina Jimoh Ogede ◽  
Emmanuel Oladapo George ◽  
Ibrahim Ayoade Adekunle

A range of explanations had been offered for the apparent change in oil price-inflation relationship outcomes ranging from the possible use of alternate energy sources, change in the structure of output regarding fewer oil intensive sectors and the role of fiscal and monetary in the affected oil-exporting countries. These changes had drawn the attention of stakeholders, government and the society at large to the anecdotal relationship among oil price volatility, inflation, and output in Africa oil-exporting countries. This study leans empirical credence to the impact of oil price volatility on inflation and economic performance in the Africa oil-exporting countries from 1995 through 2017. We employed the Pool Mean Group estimation procedure with the inference drawn at a 5% level of significance. We found that oil price volatility had a negative and significant effect on inflation in Africa oil-exporting countries. The study concluded that oil price volatility had a substantial impact on inflation in the Africa oil-exporting countries. The study, therefore, recommended that Africa oil-exporting countries should adopt precautionary measures to monitor inflation potentials due to different responses of inflation to positive and negative oil price shocks.


2021 ◽  
pp. 114-123
Author(s):  
Mohamad Azwan Md Isa ◽  
Azlan Taha Baharim ◽  
Suhana Mohamed ◽  
Mohd Khairul Ariff Noh ◽  
Ferri Nasrul ◽  
...  

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