A fear index to predict oil futures returns

Auteurs-es

  • Julien Chevallier IPAG Business School (IPAG Lab)
  • Benoit Sevi IPAG Business School (IPAG Lab)

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.15173/esr.v20i3.552

Mots-clés :

Oil Futures, Variance Risk Premium, Forecasting,

Résumé

This paper evaluates the predictability of WTI light sweet crude oil futures by using the variance risk premium, i.e. the difference between model-free measures of implied and realized volatilities. Additional regressors known for their ability to explain crude oil futures prices are also considered, capturing macroeconomic, financial and oil-specific influences. The results indicate that the explanatory power of the (negative) variance risk premium on oil excess returns is particularly strong (up to 25% for the adjusted R-squared across our regressions). It complements other financial (e.g. default spread) and oil-specific (e.g. US oil stocks) factors highlighted in previous literature.

Téléchargements

Publié-e

2014-06-12

Numéro

Rubrique

Articles