Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Cortazar, G. and Eterovic, F. (2010)

Can oil prices help estimate commodity futures prices? the cases of copper and silver. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resourpol.2010.07.004

Revista : Resources Policy
Volumen : 35
Número : 4
Páginas : 283-291
Tipo de publicación : ISI Ir a publicación

Abstract

There is an extensive literature on modeling the stochastic process of commodity futures. It has been shown that models with several risk factors are able to adequately fit both the level and the volatility structure of observed transactions with reasonable low errors.One of the problems commodities futures markets have is the relatively short term maturities of their contracts, which typically ranges for only a few years. This poses a problem for valuing long term investments which requires extrapolating the observed term structure. There has been little work on how to effectively do this extrapolation and the introduced error level. Cortazar et al (2008) propose a multi-commodity model that jointly estimates two commodities, one with much longer maturity futures contracts than the other, showing that futures prices of one commodity may be useful information for estimating the stochastic process of another. They implement their procedure using highly correlated commodities like WTI and Brent.In this paper we analyze using prices of long term oil futures contracts to help estimate long term copper and silver prices. We start by analyzing the performance of the Cortazar et al (2008) multi-commodity model, now applied to oil-copper and oil-silver which have much lower correlation than the WTI-Brent contracts. We show that for these commodities with lower correlation the multi-commodity model seems not to be effective. We then propose a modified multi-commodity model with a much simpler structure which is easier to estimate and that uses the non-stationary long term process of oil to help estimate long term copper and silver futures prices, achieving a much better fit than using available individual or multicommodity models.