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The global business cycle and speculative demand for crude oil

Elisabete Neves, Vítor Oliveira, Joana Leite and Carla Henriques

China Finance Review International, 2021, vol. 11, issue 4, 502-521

Abstract: Purpose - This paper aims to better understand if speculative activity is a factor or even the main factor in the run-up of oil prices in the spot market, particularly in the recent price bubble that occurred in the period from mid-2003 to 2008. Design/methodology/approach - The methodology used is based on an existing vector autoregressive model proposed by Kilian and Murphy (2014), which is a structural model of the global market for crude oil that accounts for flow demand and flow supply shocks and speculative demand oil shocks. Findings - From the output of the authors’ structural model, the authors ruled out speculation as a factor of rising oil prices. The authors have found instead that the rapid oil demand caused by an unexpected increase in the global business cycle is the most accurate culprit. Despite the change of perspective in the speculative component, the authors’ conclusions concur with the findings of Kilian and Murphy (2014) and others. Originality/value - As far as the authors are aware, this is the first time that a study has used as a spread oil variable, a speculative component of the real price, replacing the oil inventories considered by Kilian and Murphy (2014). Another contribution is that the model used allows estimating traditional oil demand elasticity in production and oil supply elasticity in spread movements, casting doubt on existing models with perfect price-inelastic output for crude oil.

Keywords: Demand; Supply; Speculation; Inventories; Spreads; Futures; Crude oil; Elasticity; Global markets; F44; G1 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (5)

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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:cfripp:cfri-05-2021-0091

DOI: 10.1108/CFRI-05-2021-0091

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