Do extreme shocks help forecast oil price volatility? The augmented GARCH‐MIDAS approach

Extreme shocks (e.g., wars and financial crises) cause violent fluctuations in crude oil volatility. In this paper, we first propose GARCH models in the framework of MIDAS augmented to include the impacts of extreme shocks on oil price volatility. In‐sample results show that extreme shocks can induc...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of finance and economics 2023-04, Vol.28 (2), p.2056-2073
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Lu, Ma, Feng, Liu, Guoshan, Lang, Qiaoqi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Extreme shocks (e.g., wars and financial crises) cause violent fluctuations in crude oil volatility. In this paper, we first propose GARCH models in the framework of MIDAS augmented to include the impacts of extreme shocks on oil price volatility. In‐sample results show that extreme shocks can induce the additional volatility of crude oil. Further, the results from out‐of‐sample clearly indicate that the crude oil volatility is best fitted by the EGARCH‐MIDAS‐ES model, which incorporates asymmetric effects in the short‐term component and the significant effect of extreme shocks in the long‐term component. Additionally, robustness tests confirm that the augmented volatility models can produce better prediction results, both statistically and economically, than the conventional GARCH‐MIDAS model. Furthermore, we verify that negative extreme shocks can cause larger volatility, whereas positive extreme shocks of the same magnitude have smaller effects. Our contribution offers fresh insights into energy price volatility forecasting by considering extreme shocks.
ISSN:1076-9307
1099-1158
DOI:10.1002/ijfe.2525