A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar

This paper offers an empirical characterization of the relation between the international price of oil and exchange rates that is both useful and reliable. Our characterization is useful because it rests on information of asset prices that are determined in functioning asset markets. Our characteriz...

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Main Authors: Jaime Marquez, Silvia Merler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-07-01
Series:Journal of Risk and Financial Management
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/13/8/164
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spelling doaj-be069d383c344ee18e7b40591188d7132020-11-25T03:07:55ZengMDPI AGJournal of Risk and Financial Management1911-80661911-80742020-07-011316416410.3390/jrfm13080164A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the DollarJaime Marquez0Silvia Merler1School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC 20036, USASchool of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC 20036, USAThis paper offers an empirical characterization of the relation between the international price of oil and exchange rates that is both useful and reliable. Our characterization is useful because it rests on information of asset prices that are determined in functioning asset markets. Our characterization is reliable because its maintained assumptions are not rejected by the data. Four features differentiate our work from previous analyses. First, our reliance on bilateral rates opens previously ignored financial arbitrage opportunities between oil prices and exchange rates. Second, our emphasis on statistical testing makes our characterization empirically reliable. Specifically, we use a vector-error correction modeling strategy in which both oil prices and exchange rates are endogenous. This framework allows testing for the existence of an arbitrage relation, for the direction of causality, for parameter constancy, for white noise residuals, and for forecast accuracy. Third our reliance on data through 2020 makes our analysis timely. Fourth, to emphasize the advantages of our approach, we compare our results to those derived for formulations relying on effective exchange-rate indexes.https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/13/8/164oil pricesreal effective exchange ratecointegrationChinarenminbiforecasts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jaime Marquez
Silvia Merler
spellingShingle Jaime Marquez
Silvia Merler
A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
Journal of Risk and Financial Management
oil prices
real effective exchange rate
cointegration
China
renminbi
forecasts
author_facet Jaime Marquez
Silvia Merler
author_sort Jaime Marquez
title A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
title_short A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
title_full A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
title_fullStr A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
title_full_unstemmed A Note on the Empirical Relation between Oil Prices and the Value of the Dollar
title_sort note on the empirical relation between oil prices and the value of the dollar
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Risk and Financial Management
issn 1911-8066
1911-8074
publishDate 2020-07-01
description This paper offers an empirical characterization of the relation between the international price of oil and exchange rates that is both useful and reliable. Our characterization is useful because it rests on information of asset prices that are determined in functioning asset markets. Our characterization is reliable because its maintained assumptions are not rejected by the data. Four features differentiate our work from previous analyses. First, our reliance on bilateral rates opens previously ignored financial arbitrage opportunities between oil prices and exchange rates. Second, our emphasis on statistical testing makes our characterization empirically reliable. Specifically, we use a vector-error correction modeling strategy in which both oil prices and exchange rates are endogenous. This framework allows testing for the existence of an arbitrage relation, for the direction of causality, for parameter constancy, for white noise residuals, and for forecast accuracy. Third our reliance on data through 2020 makes our analysis timely. Fourth, to emphasize the advantages of our approach, we compare our results to those derived for formulations relying on effective exchange-rate indexes.
topic oil prices
real effective exchange rate
cointegration
China
renminbi
forecasts
url https://www.mdpi.com/1911-8074/13/8/164
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