Michael S. Haigh
;
Matthew T. Holt

crack spread hedging: accounting for time-varying volatility spillovers in the energy futures markets (replication data)

Crude oil, heating oil, and unleaded gasoline futures contracts are simultaneously analysed for their effectiveness in reducing price volatility for an energy trader. A conceptual model is developed for a trader hedging the crack spread. Various hedge ratio estimation techniques are compared to a Multivariate GARCH model that directly incorporates the time to maturity effect often found in futures markets. Modelling of the time-variation in hedge ratios via the Multivariate GARCH methodology, and thus taking into account volatility spillovers between markets is shown to result in significant reductions in uncertainty even while accounting for trading costs.

Data and Resources

Suggested Citation

Haigh, Michael S.; Holt, Matthew T. (2002): Crack spread hedging: accounting for time-varying volatility spillovers in the energy futures markets (replication data). Version: 1. Journal of Applied Econometrics. Dataset. http://dx.doi.org/10.15456/jae.2022314.1310359754