Do Commodity Index Traders Destabilize Agricultural Futures Prices?
(2013) In Applied Economics Quarterly- Abstract
- Motivated by repeated price spikes and crashes over the last decade, we investigate whether the intensive investment activities of commodity index traders(CITs) have destabilized agricultural futures markets. Using a stochastic volatility model, we treat conditional volatility as an unobserved component, and analyze whether it has been affected by the expected and unexpected open interest of CITs. However, with respect to twelve increasingly financialized grain, livestock, and soft commodities, we do not find robust evidence that this is the case. We thus conclude that justifying a tighter regulation of CITs by blaming them for more volatile agricultural futures markets appears to be unwarranted.
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/3172531
- author
- Bohl, Martin ; Javed, Farrukh LU and Stephan, Patrick
- organization
- publishing date
- 2013
- type
- Contribution to specialist publication or newspaper
- publication status
- in press
- subject
- keywords
- Commodity Index Traders, Futures Prices, Agricultural Markets
- categories
- Popular Science
- in
- Applied Economics Quarterly
- publisher
- Duncker & Humblot
- ISSN
- 1611-6607
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 9b042424-d601-4f36-a940-0f58e64aca3d (old id 3172531)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 09:31:59
- date last changed
- 2018-11-21 20:53:47
@misc{9b042424-d601-4f36-a940-0f58e64aca3d, abstract = {{Motivated by repeated price spikes and crashes over the last decade, we investigate whether the intensive investment activities of commodity index traders(CITs) have destabilized agricultural futures markets. Using a stochastic volatility model, we treat conditional volatility as an unobserved component, and analyze whether it has been affected by the expected and unexpected open interest of CITs. However, with respect to twelve increasingly financialized grain, livestock, and soft commodities, we do not find robust evidence that this is the case. We thus conclude that justifying a tighter regulation of CITs by blaming them for more volatile agricultural futures markets appears to be unwarranted.}}, author = {{Bohl, Martin and Javed, Farrukh and Stephan, Patrick}}, issn = {{1611-6607}}, keywords = {{Commodity Index Traders; Futures Prices; Agricultural Markets}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Duncker & Humblot}}, series = {{Applied Economics Quarterly}}, title = {{Do Commodity Index Traders Destabilize Agricultural Futures Prices?}}, year = {{2013}}, }