Price effects of commodity financialization: Review of the evidence

Kupabado MM, Kähler J (2024)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2024

Journal

DOI: 10.1111/joes.12619

Abstract

Following the 2007/2008 financial crisis, the price effects of commodity financialization have become an important research topic. We review the empirical evidence, focusing on statistical approaches and econometric models, and find that (1) Granger-causality tests are unable to establish a relationship between commodity futures prices and funds of financial investors, implying a lack of evidence that financialization influences commodity futures prices and (2) studies that use correlation and price spread analysis mostly report evidence of a significant price effect of financialization. Thus, the statistical and econometric approaches adopted by the various studies influence the empirical findings. In addition, data identification may have an impact since economic models and statistical techniques can be sensitive to slight differences in the dataset. Our study of the literature shows that the definition of financialization is open-ended and ambiguous. A theoretical literature review on financialization could be the logical next step.

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How to cite

APA:

Kupabado, M.M., & Kähler, J. (2024). Price effects of commodity financialization: Review of the evidence. Journal of Economic Surveys. https://doi.org/10.1111/joes.12619

MLA:

Kupabado, Moses Mananyi, and Jürgen Kähler. "Price effects of commodity financialization: Review of the evidence." Journal of Economic Surveys (2024).

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