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Oil price volatility is effective in predicting food price volatility. Or is it?

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  • Ioannis Chatziantoniou, Stavros Degiannakis, George Filis, and Tim Lloyd

Abstract

Volatility spillovers between food commodities and oil prices have been identified in the literature, yet, there has been no empirical evidence to suggest that oil price volatility improves real out-of-sample forecasts of food price volatility. In this study we provide new evidence showing that oil price volatility does not improve forecasts of agricultural price volatility. This finding is based on extensive and rigorous testing of five internationally traded agricultural commodities (soybeans, corn, sugar, rough rice and wheat) and two oil benchmarks (Brent and WTI). We employ monthly and daily oil and food price volatility data and two forecasting frameworks, namely, the HAR and MIDAS-HAR, for the period 2nd January 1990 until 31st March 2017. Results indicate that oil volatility-enhanced HAR or MIDAS-HAR models cannot systematically outperform the standard HAR model. Thus, contrary to what has been suggested by the existing literature based on in-sample analysis, we are unable to find any systematic evidence that oil price volatility improves out-of-sample forecasts of food price volatility. The results remain robust to the choice of different out-of-sample forecasting periods and three different volatility measures.

Suggested Citation

  • Ioannis Chatziantoniou, Stavros Degiannakis, George Filis, and Tim Lloyd, 2021. "Oil price volatility is effective in predicting food price volatility. Or is it?," The Energy Journal, International Association for Energy Economics, vol. 0(Number 6).
  • Handle: RePEc:aen:journl:ej42-6-filis
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    1. Matteo Bonato & Oğuzhan Çepni & Rangan Gupta & Christian Pierdzioch, 2023. "El Niño, La Niña, and forecastability of the realized variance of agricultural commodity prices: Evidence from a machine learning approach," Journal of Forecasting, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 42(4), pages 785-801, July.
    2. Bonato, Matteo & Cepni, Oguzhan & Gupta, Rangan & Pierdzioch, Christian, 2024. "Financial stress and realized volatility: The case of agricultural commodities," Research in International Business and Finance, Elsevier, vol. 71(C).
    3. Wu, Lan & Xu, Weiju & Huang, Dengshi & Li, Pan, 2022. "Does the volatility spillover effect matter in oil price volatility predictability? Evidence from high-frequency data," International Review of Economics & Finance, Elsevier, vol. 82(C), pages 299-306.
    4. Matteo Bonato & Oguzhan Cepni & Rangan Gupta & Christian Pierdzioch, 2024. "Forecasting the realized volatility of agricultural commodity prices: Does sentiment matter?," Journal of Forecasting, John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., vol. 43(6), pages 2088-2125, September.
    5. Ting Zhang & Hai-Chuan Xu & Wei-Xing Zhou, 2025. "The impact of external uncertainties on the extreme return connectedness between food, fossil energy, and clean energy markets," Papers 2503.06603, arXiv.org.
    6. Rangan Gupta & Christian Pierdzioch, 2024. "Multi-Task Forecasting of the Realized Volatilities of Agricultural Commodity Prices," Mathematics, MDPI, vol. 12(18), pages 1-26, September.
    7. Fernando Dupin da Cunha Mello & Prashant Kumar & Erick G. Sperandio Nascimento, 2024. "Advancements in Soybean Price Forecasting: Impact of AI and Critical Research Gaps in Global Markets," Economies, MDPI, vol. 12(11), pages 1-24, November.

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