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Predicting crashes in oil prices during the COVID-19 pandemic with mixed causal-noncausal models

This paper aims at shedding light upon how transforming or detrending a series can substantially impact predictions of mixed causal-noncausal (MAR) models, namely dynamic processes that depend not only on their lags but also on their leads. MAR models have been successfully implemented on commodity prices as they allow to generate nonlinear features such as locally explosive episodes (denoted here as bubbles) in a strictly stationary setting. We consider multiple detrending methods and investigate, using Monte Carlo simulations, to what extent they preserve the bubble patterns observed in the raw data. MAR models relies on the dynamics observed in the series alone and does not require economical background to construct a structural model, which can sometimes be intricate to specify or which may lack parsimony. We investigate oil prices and estimate probabilities of crashes before and during the first 2020 wave of the COVID-19 pandemic. We consider three different mechanical detrending methods and compare them to a detrending performed using the level of strategic petroleum reserves.

preprint2022arXivOpen access

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