大宗商品指数投资与食品价格:“大师假说”能否解释近期的价格飙升?

Commodity index investment and food prices: does the “Masters Hypothesis” explain recent price spikes?

Agricultural Economics · 2013
被引 55
人大 A-

中文导读

综述了多项实证研究,检验大宗商品指数投资是否如“大师假说”所言导致农产品期货价格泡沫,发现多数证据不支持该假说。

Abstract

Abstract The “Masters Hypothesis” is the claim that unprecedented buying pressure in recent years from commodity index investors created massive bubbles in food and energy prices. The purpose of this article is to review the evidence from recent studies that investigate the empirical relationship between index investment and price movements in agricultural futures markets. One line of research uses time‐series regression tests, such as Granger causality tests, to investigate the relationship between price movements and index positions. This research provides little evidence in support of the Masters Hypothesis in agricultural futures markets. A second line of research uses cross‐sectional regression tests and studies in this area provide very limited evidence in favor of the Masters Hypothesis for agricultural futures markets. A third line of research investigates whether there is a significant relationship between commodity index trading and the difference, or spread, between futures prices of different contract maturities on the same date. These studies report a range of results depending on the type of test. However, the bulk of the evidence indicates either no relationship or a negative relationship, which is once again inconsistent with the Masters Hypothesis. Overall, this growing body of literature fails to find compelling evidence that buying pressure from commodity index investment in recent years caused a massive bubble in agricultural futures prices. The Masters Hypothesis is simply not a valid characterization of reality.

商品指数投资粮食价格Masters假说农产品期货