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Modeling and Forecasting Primary Commodity Prices [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 560 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Oct-2006
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0754646297
  • ISBN-13: 9780754646297
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 264 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 560 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Oct-2006
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0754646297
  • ISBN-13: 9780754646297
Teised raamatud teemal:
Recent economic growth in China and other Asian countries has led to increased commodity demand which has caused price rises and accompanying price fluctuations not only for crude oil but also for the many other raw materials. Such trends mean that world commodity markets are once again under intense scrutiny. This book provides new insights into the modeling and forecasting of primary commodity prices by featuring comprehensive applications of the most recent methods of statistical time series analysis. The latter utilize econometric methods concerned with structural breaks, unobserved components, chaotic discovery, long memory, heteroskedasticity, wavelet estimation and fractional integration. Relevant tests employed include neural networks, correlation dimensions, Lyapunov exponents, fractional integration and rescaled range. The price forecasting involves structural time series trend plus cycle and cyclical trend models. Practical applications focus on the price behaviour of more than twenty international commodity markets.

Arvustused

Modern statistical techniques have greatly enlarged the range and complexity of analysis that can be applied to commodity market studies. Labys pioneers by making the leap from traditional structural models to the broad range of advanced time series methods. This is the first and only book on the frontiers of commodity market modeling. F. Gerard Adams, University of Pennsylvania, USA

List of Figures
viii
List of Tables
ix
List of Contributors
xi
Foreword xiii
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xvii
List of Abbreviations
xix
Introduction 1(2)
Time Series Perspective
3(1)
New Research Perspectives
4(4)
Plan for this Study
8(3)
History of Commodity Price Analysis
11(28)
The Challenge
12(2)
Structural Market Approach
14(7)
Nonstructural Approach
21(9)
Some Remaining Problems
30(6)
Conclusions
36(3)
Part 1 Long Term Price Movements
Identifying Trends and Breaks
39(10)
Trends and Breaks
40(2)
Exogenous Break Tests
42(2)
Endogenous Break Tests
44(3)
Some Empirical Comparisons
47(1)
Conclusions
47(2)
Convergence of Commodity Prices
49(22)
Nature of Price Linkages
50(3)
Geographic Price Separation
53(2)
Methods for Measuring Convergence
55(4)
Empirical Results
59(9)
Conclusions
68(3)
Part 2 Medium Term Price Movements
Identifying Price Cycles
71(20)
Timing and Frequency
72(1)
Duration Dependence
73(6)
Modeling and Confirmation
79(4)
Volatility and Persistence
83(5)
Conclusions
88(3)
Business Cycle Impacts
91(16)
Dynamic Factor Analysis
92(1)
Prices and the Common Factor
93(3)
Identifying the Common Factor
96(3)
Business Cycles and the Common Factor
99(4)
Conclusions
103(4)
Part 3 Short Term Price Movements
Color of Commodity Prices
107(18)
Fractional Integration
108(1)
The Color of Noise
109(2)
The Range of Price Tests
111(6)
Empirical Results
117(5)
Conclusions
122(3)
Wavelet Models Transforms of Commodity Prices
125(24)
A Brief Theory of Wavelets
126(7)
Wavelet Estimation and Tests
133(5)
Constructing the Patio Plots
138(5)
Implications for Price Behavior
143(3)
Conclusions
146(3)
Part 4 Price Forecasting
Noisy Chaotic Dynamics
149(14)
The Range of Price Tests
150(6)
Data and Empirical Results
156(4)
Conclusions
160(3)
Structural Forecasting Models
163(32)
Model Specification
164(2)
Testing for Unit Roots and Cycles
166(4)
Maximum Likelihood Results
170(8)
Price Forecasting
178(4)
Conclusions
182(3)
Prospects for the Future
185(1)
More Time Series Analysis
185(5)
Beyond Time Series Analysis
190(5)
Appendix: Resources for Future Research 195(6)
Bibliography 201(36)
Index 237


Professor Walter C. Labys is Benedum Distinguished Scholar in the Agricultural and Resource Economics Program at West Virginia University, USA. He is Gunnar Myrdal Scholar at the United Nations Economics Commission for Europe and has been Faculty Research Associate of the Group on Applied Econometric Research at the University of the Mediterranean (Aix-Marseille) in France. Over the past thirty years, Professor Labys has pioneered in the development and application of econometric methods important for analyzing commodity price behaviour, the modelling of agricultural, mineral and energy markets, and the impact of commodity markets on the stability and growth of surrounding developing economies. He has authored and co-authored more than fourteen books and numerous articles in leading journals of agricultural, energy and resource economics as well as international trade.