886 resultados para commodity
Resumo:
In this paper, we examine the temporal stability of the evidence for two commodity futures pricing theories. We investigate whether the forecast power of commodity futures can be attributed to the extent to which they exhibit seasonality and we also consider whether there are time varying parameters or structural breaks in these pricing relationships. Compared to previous studies, we find stronger evidence of seasonality in the basis, which supports the theory of storage. The power of the basis to forecast subsequent price changes is also strengthened, while results on the presence of a risk premium are inconclusive. In addition, we show that the forecasting power of commodity futures cannot be attributed to the extent to which they exhibit seasonality. We find that in most cases where structural breaks occur, only changes in the intercepts and not the slopes are detected, illustrating that the forecast power of the basis is stable over different economic environments.
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In this paper we study the stochastic behavior of the prices and volatilities of a sample of six of the most important commodity markets and we compare these properties with those of the equity market. we observe a substantial degree of heterogeneity in the behavior of the series. Our findings show that it is inappropriate to treat different kinds of commodities as a single asset class as is frequently the case in the academic literature and in the industry. We demonstrate that commodities can be a useful diversifier of equity volatility as well as equity returns. Options pricing and hedging applications exemplify the economic impacts of the differences across commodities and between model specifications.
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Bushmeat is a large but largely invisible contributor to the economies of west and central African countries. Yet the trade is currently unsustainable. Hunting is reducing wildlife populations, driving more vulnerable species to local and regional extinction, and threatening biodiversity. This paper uses a commodity chain approach to explore the bushmeat trade and to demonstrate why an interdisciplinary approach is required if the trade is to be sustainable in the future.
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This paper contributes to the debate on the effects of the financialization of commodity futures markets by studying the conditional volatility of long–short commodity portfolios and their conditional correlations with traditional assets (stocks and bonds). Using several groups of trading strategies that hedge fund managers are known to implement, we show that long–short speculators do not cause changes in the volatilities of the portfolios they hold or changes in the conditional correlations between these portfolios and traditional assets. Thus calls for increased regulation of commodity money managers are, at this stage, premature. Additionally, long–short speculators can take comfort in knowing that their trades do not alter the risk and diversification properties of their portfolios.
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Using monthly time-series data 1999-2013, the paper shows that markets for agricultural commodities provide a yardstick for real purchasing power, and thus a reference point for the real value of fiat currencies. The daily need for each adult to consume about 2800 food calories is universal; data from FAO food balance sheets confirm that the world basket of food consumed daily is non-volatile in comparison to the volatility of currency exchange rates, and so the replacement cost of food consumed provides a consistent indicator of economic value. Food commodities are storable for short periods, but ultimately perishable, and this exerts continual pressure for markets to clear in the short term; moreover, food calories can be obtained from a very large range of foodstuffs, and so most households are able to use arbitrage to select a near optimal weighting of quantities purchased. The paper proposes an original method to enable a standard of value to be established, definable in physical units on the basis of actual worldwide consumption of food goods, with an illustration of the method.
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This paper reviews extant research on commodity price dynamics and commodity derivatives pricing models. In the first half, we provide an overview of stylized facts of commodity price behavior that have been explored and documented in the theoretical and empirical literature. In the second half, we review existing derivatives pricing models and discuss how the peculiarities of commodity markets have been integrated in these models. We conclude the paper with a brief outlook on important research questions that need to be addressed in the future.
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This paper considers whether there were periodically collapsing rational speculative bubbles in commodity prices over a 40-year period from the late 1960s. We apply a switching regression approach to a broad range of commodities using two different measures of fundamental values—estimated from convenience yields and from a set of macroeconomic factors believed to affect commodity demand. We find reliable evidence for bubbles only among crude oil and feeder cattle, showing the popular belief that the extreme price movements observed in commodity markets were caused by pure speculation to be unsustainable
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In this paper, we study jumps in commodity prices. Unlike assumed in existing models of commodity price dynamics, a simple analysis of the data reveals that the probability of tail events is not constant but depends on the time of the year, i.e. exhibits seasonality. We propose a stochastic volatility jump–diffusion model to capture this seasonal variation. Applying the Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) methodology, we estimate our model using 20 years of futures data from four different commodity markets. We find strong statistical evidence to suggest that our model with seasonal jump intensity outperforms models featuring a constant jump intensity. To demonstrate the practical relevance of our findings, we show that our model typically improves Value-at-Risk (VaR) forecasts.
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The article examines whether commodity risk is priced in the cross-section of global equity returns. We employ a long-only equally-weighted portfolio of commodity futures and a term structure portfolio that captures phases of backwardation and contango as mimicking portfolios for commodity risk. We find that equity-sorted portfolios with greater sensitivities to the excess returns of the backwardation and contango portfolio command higher average excess returns, suggesting that when measured appropriately, commodity risk is pervasive in stocks. Our conclusions are robust to the addition to the pricing model of financial, macroeconomic and business cycle-based risk factors.
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Nesta Tese foram apresentadas algumas alternativas de antecipação do preço futuro do aço a partir do emprego de modelos econométricos. Estes modelos foram definidos em função da análise do comportamento, no longo prazo, entre as séries de preços do aço no Brasil vis-à-vis seus respectivos preços no exterior. A verificação deste comportamento de longo prazo foi realizada através do teste de cointegração. A partir da constatação da não cointegração dessas séries, foram definidos dois modelos, cujas previsões, para diversos períodos, foram aqui apresentadas. Foi feita uma análise comparativa, onde foram identificados o melhor modelo e para quais temporalidades de previsão são melhor empregados. Como foi aqui comprovado, o aço é um insumo primordial nos empreendimentos industriais. Considerando que, atualmente, os preços são demandados de forma firme, ou seja, sem possibilidade de alteração, faz-se necessária a identificação de mecanismos de antecipação dos movimentos futuros desta commodity, de modo que se possa considerá-los na definição do preço ofertado, reduzindo assim perdas por suas flutuações inesperadas.
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As rápidas mudanças que se desenvolvem no planeta varrem conceitos antigos, alteram estratégias de empresas e mudam o comportamento de governos e nações. O agronegócio não fica incólume neste intenso processo. As políticas agrícolas e a estrutura do setor passam por ajustes e revisões. Dentro desta linha de pensamento, um cenário que se torna cada vez mais evidente é a competição entre cadeias, além da competição entre empresas de forma isolada. Nesta perspectiva, o gerenciamento da cadeia de abastecimento pode ser considerado um importante vetor na competitividade da cadeia, no momento em que preconiza a customização das atividades que agregam valor, integrando cada vez mais clientes e fornecedores. Mas para a efetividade deste gerenciamento, a gestão da informação ao longo da cadeia assume importância maior ainda, em relação ao seu uso nas empresas de forma isolada. Dentro do ambiente de mudanças do agronegócio, após a abertura da economia brasileira de 1990, a cadeia de abastecimento do arroz vem passando por intensas transformações para se manter competitiva. Dentre estas, surge o arroz orgânico como forma de segmentar mercados consumidores através da diferenciação, e o que é mais importante, a adição de valor ao produto, desde a produção rural. Por se tratar o arroz orgânico de um produto diferenciado, pressupôs-se que a cadeia de abastecimento para este produto, apresente diferenças da cadeia de abastecimento para o arroz commodity. Considerando isto é que se objetivou com esta pesquisa “analisar o processamento da informação na cadeia de abastecimento do arroz com transações de dois tipos de produtos: arroz commodity e arroz orgânico”. O método científico utilizado foi o estudo de caso, onde foram levantados dados e fatos dos agentes que formam os elos da cadeia de abastecimento do arroz commodity e do arroz orgânico, para subsidiar as análises necessárias a atingir o objetivo proposto. As principais conclusões a que se chegou são: quanto à cadeia, esta apresenta diferenças que vão desde as relacionadas aos produtos, até as transações realizadas entre os agentes da cadeia. Quanto à informação ao longo da cadeia, o agente de produção do arroz commodity e do arroz orgânico, é o elo que menos utiliza informações sistematizadas em suas decisões. Também, que existem diferenças nos fluxos de informações ao longo da cadeia de abastecimento quando ocorrem transações com arroz commodity e quando com arroz orgânico. Estas diferenças vão desde as informações trocadas, o conteúdo e objetivos com que são trocadas, o sentido e o envolvimento dos departamentos dos agentes da cadeia. Pode-se acrescentar ainda, que em transações com arroz orgânico houve maior diálogo entre os agentes ao longo da cadeia, que foi mais representativo no segmento Produção x Beneficiamento.
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The objective of this article is to study (understand and forecast) spot metal price levels and changes at monthly, quarterly, and annual horizons. The data to be used consists of metal-commodity prices in a monthly frequency from 1957 to 2012 from the International Financial Statistics of the IMF on individual metal series. We will also employ the (relatively large) list of co-variates used in Welch and Goyal (2008) and in Hong and Yogo (2009) , which are available for download. Regarding short- and long-run comovement, we will apply the techniques and the tests proposed in the common-feature literature to build parsimonious VARs, which possibly entail quasi-structural relationships between different commodity prices and/or between a given commodity price and its potential demand determinants. These parsimonious VARs will be later used as forecasting models to be combined to yield metal-commodity prices optimal forecasts. Regarding out-of-sample forecasts, we will use a variety of models (linear and non-linear, single equation and multivariate) and a variety of co-variates to forecast the returns and prices of metal commodities. With the forecasts of a large number of models (N large) and a large number of time periods (T large), we will apply the techniques put forth by the common-feature literature on forecast combinations. The main contribution of this paper is to understand the short-run dynamics of metal prices. We show theoretically that there must be a positive correlation between metal-price variation and industrial-production variation if metal supply is held fixed in the short run when demand is optimally chosen taking into account optimal production for the industrial sector. This is simply a consequence of the derived-demand model for cost-minimizing firms. Our empirical evidence fully supports this theoretical result, with overwhelming evidence that cycles in metal prices are synchronized with those in industrial production. This evidence is stronger regarding the global economy but holds as well for the U.S. economy to a lesser degree. Regarding forecasting, we show that models incorporating (short-run) commoncycle restrictions perform better than unrestricted models, with an important role for industrial production as a predictor for metal-price variation. Still, in most cases, forecast combination techniques outperform individual models.