2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2008.04.003
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Oil price shocks and stock markets in the U.S. and 13 European countries

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Cited by 1,053 publications
(633 citation statements)
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“…For example, Sadorsky (2001) found a rise in oil price increases the return to Canadian oil and gas stock sector prices and Park and Ratti (2008) also showed that shocks in oil price have a significant effect on stock returns in the same month or within one month. But Cong, Wei, Jiao, & Fan (2008) showed that oil price shocks or volatility has no statistically significant effect on the real stock returns of most Chinese stock market indices, except on some manufacturing indices and indices of some oil companies.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Sadorsky (2001) found a rise in oil price increases the return to Canadian oil and gas stock sector prices and Park and Ratti (2008) also showed that shocks in oil price have a significant effect on stock returns in the same month or within one month. But Cong, Wei, Jiao, & Fan (2008) showed that oil price shocks or volatility has no statistically significant effect on the real stock returns of most Chinese stock market indices, except on some manufacturing indices and indices of some oil companies.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oil price hikes have a negative impact on stock returns but drops in oil prices do not necessarily have a positive impact. However studies such as Park and Ratti [15] and Nandha and Faff [3] do not find evidence on asymmetric effects in stock markets. Some explanations regarding the asymmetry puzzle come from investment uncertainty or sectoral shift channels.…”
Section: Source: Energy Information Administration (Eia) Internationamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A negative association between oil price shocks and stock market returns has been reported in several recent papers. Nandha and Faff (2008) find oil prices rises have a detrimental effect on stock returns in all sectors except mining and oil and gas industries, O'Neil et al (2008) find that oil price increases lead to reduced stock returns in the United States, the United Kingdom and France, and Park and Ratti (2008) report that oil price shocks have a statistically significant negative impact on real stock returns in the U.S. and 12 European oil importing countries. 2 In new strands in the literature, Kilian and Park (2007) report that only oil price increases driven by precautionary demand for oil over concern about future oil supplies negatively affect stock prices, and Gogineni (2007) finds that industry stock price returns depends on demand and cost side reliance on oil and on size of oil price changes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the following section, we provide a non-quantitative motivation for our analysis. Our econometric model and explanations of our 4 The impact of oil price increases on stock market returns (and analysis of short-run effects) has been considered by Nandha and Faff (2008), O'Neil et al (2008), Park and Ratti (2008), Ciner (2001) and Sadorsky (1999), as noted earlier. In other work, for example, Sadorsky (2001) and Boyer and Filion (2007) find that positive oil price shocks significantly raise stocks returns for Canadian oil and gas companies, El-Sharif et al (2005) report a similar result for U.K. oil and gas companies, and Papapetrou (2001) reports that positive oil price shocks significantly reduce stock returns in Greece.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%