Oil prices implied volatility or direction: Which matters more to financial markets?

被引:2
|
作者
Dupoyet B.V. [1 ]
Shank C.A. [2 ]
机构
[1] Florida International University, College of Business, 11200 SW 8th Street, RB 229A, Miami, 33199, FL
[2] Wright School of Business, Dalton State College, 650 College Dr., Dalton, 30720, GA
关键词
Credit spreads; Industries; Oil implied volatility; OVX; Stock returns;
D O I
10.1007/s11408-018-0314-7
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
We examine the impact of oil price uncertainty on US stock returns by industry using the US Oil Fund options implied volatility OVX index and a GJR-GARCH model.We test the effect of the implied volatility of oil on a wide array of domestic industries’ returns using daily data from 2007 to 2016, controlling for a variety of variables such as aggregate market returns, market volatility, exchange rates, interest rates, and inflation expectations. Our main finding is that the implied volatility of oil prices has a consistent and statistically significant negative impact on nine out of the ten industries defined in the Fama and French (J Financ Econ 43:153–193, 1997) 10-industry classification. Oil prices, on the other hand, yield mixed results, with only three industries showing a positive and significant effect, and two industries exhibiting a negative and significant effect. These findings are an indication that the volatility of oil has now surpassed oil prices themselves in terms of influence on financial markets. Furthermore, we show that both oil prices and their volatility have a positive and significant effect on corporate bond credit spreads. Overall, our results indicate that oil price uncertainty increases the risk of future cash flows for goods and services, resulting in negative stock market returns and higher corporate bond credit spreads. © 2018, Swiss Society for Financial Market Research.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:275 / 295
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] US or Domestic Monetary Policy: Which Matters More for Financial Stability?
    Stephen G. Cecchetti
    Tommaso Mancini-Griffoli
    Machiko Narita
    Ratna Sahay
    IMF Economic Review, 2020, 68 : 35 - 65
  • [32] US or Domestic Monetary Policy: Which Matters More for Financial Stability?
    Cecchetti, Stephen G.
    Mancini-Griffoli, Tommaso
    Narita, Machiko
    Sahay, Ratna
    IMF ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2020, 68 (01) : 35 - 65
  • [33] Nonlinear Relationships between Oil Prices and Implied Volatilities: Providing More Valuable Information
    Lin, Jeng-Bau
    Liang, Chin-Chia
    Tsai, Wei
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (14)
  • [34] Modeling and Testing Volatility Spillovers in Oil and Financial Markets for the USA, the UK, and China
    Chang, Chia-Lin
    McAleer, Michael
    Tian, Jiarong
    ENERGIES, 2019, 12 (08):
  • [35] Return and volatility transmission between world oil prices and stock markets of the GCC countries
    Arouri, Mohamed El Hedi
    Lahiani, Amine
    Duc Khuong Nguyen
    ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2011, 28 (04) : 1815 - 1825
  • [36] Asymmetric volatility spillovers between crude oil and China's financial markets
    Wang, Hu
    Li, Shouwei
    ENERGY, 2021, 233 (233)
  • [37] Implied volatility relationships between crude oil and the US stock markets: Dynamic correlation and spillover effects
    Liu, Zhenhua
    Tseng, Hui-Kuan
    Wu, Jy S.
    Ding, Zhihua
    RESOURCES POLICY, 2020, 66
  • [38] The role of uncertainty and sentiment for intraday volatility connectedness between oil and financial markets
    Szafranek, Karol
    Rubaszek, Michal
    Uddin, Gazi Salah
    ENERGY ECONOMICS, 2024, 137
  • [39] HOW LEARNING IN FINANCIAL-MARKETS GENERATES EXCESS VOLATILITY AND PREDICTABILITY IN STOCK-PRICES
    TIMMERMANN, AG
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 1993, 108 (04): : 1135 - 1145
  • [40] How does oil market uncertainty interact with other markets? An empirical analysis of implied volatility index
    Liu, Ming-Lei
    Ji, Qiang
    Fan, Ying
    ENERGY, 2013, 55 : 860 - 868