Does Financial Stress Affect Commodity Futures Traders' Positions?
研究了2008年全球金融危机和新冠疫情期间美国商品期货市场的交易行为,发现两次危机中投机者和生产者的持仓变化模式不同,金融压力对投机者的影响大于套期保值者。
ABSTRACT We examine trading behavior in commodity futures markets in the United States during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis (GFC) and the COVID‐19 pandemic, focusing on absolute changes and relative exposure dynamics. These crises led to distinctly different trading patterns. During the 2008 GFC, speculators rapidly closed long positions while producers facilitated these trades, shifting risk from speculators to producers. In contrast, during the COVID‐19 crisis—characterized by milder financial stress and an early commodity market rally—there was not meaningful risk transfer from speculators. The impact on traders' relative exposures was minimal in both crises. However, speculators generally showed greater sensitivity to changing financial conditions than hedgers throughout the study period. These findings highlight the varying impacts of financial stress on commodity futures markets and the importance of crisis‐specific context in understanding trader behavior.