Commodity Contracts and Common Stocks as Hedges against Relative Consumer Price Risk
Victor L. Bernard and
Thomas J. Frecka
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 1987, vol. 22, issue 2, 169-188
Abstract:
Evidence provided here suggests that investors could have identified, ex ante, portfolios that hedge against uncertainty in the prices of three major categories of consumption: food, shelter, and transportation. This finding has implications for the practical importance of multi-period capital asset pricing theories that assume investors can identify such hedge portfolios. The study also provides some surprising evidence about the usefulness of common stocks and commodity futures contracts in hedging against specific price inflation. Certain combinations of common stocks serve as effective hedges, but combinations of commodity futures contracts contribute nothing to hedging ability.
Date: 1987
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