2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2018.11.026
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The multilateral relationship between oil and G10 currencies

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Cited by 8 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…This result is similar to the work of Adler and Sosa (2011), Aloui et al (2013), Reboredo (2012), Reboredo et al (2014), Coudert and Mignon (2016), who all reported a strong relationship between oil prices and exchange rate volatility. Kunkler and MacDonald (2019) attempted to exclude the numéraire effect (see German et al 1995 for the numéraire effect) in evaluating the co-movements between oil prices and G-10 countries' currencies. They examined the spillover and causal interference from the oil market to those currencies.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This result is similar to the work of Adler and Sosa (2011), Aloui et al (2013), Reboredo (2012), Reboredo et al (2014), Coudert and Mignon (2016), who all reported a strong relationship between oil prices and exchange rate volatility. Kunkler and MacDonald (2019) attempted to exclude the numéraire effect (see German et al 1995 for the numéraire effect) in evaluating the co-movements between oil prices and G-10 countries' currencies. They examined the spillover and causal interference from the oil market to those currencies.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The causality may not even be uni‐directional: Kilian and Zhou () find evidence that exchange rate shocks may cause oil price changes, in addition to the inverse case. Recent work by Kunkler and MacDonald () shows an underlying positive relationship between the Canadian dollar and the price of oil when accounting separately for the value of the US dollar.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, as mentioned earlier, using the US dollar as an invoicing currency in crude oil trading creates a well-known numéraire effect (Basher et al, 2012;Bahser et al, 2016;Kunkler & MacDonald, 2019), implying that the fluctuations in the US dollars are, ceteris paribus, fully offset by equal and opposite fluctuations in the US dollar price of oil. Such a numéraire effect could result in an observable inverse correlation between movements in the US dollar price of oil and movements in the US dollar.…”
Section: Why Multilateral Pricesmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Basher et al (2012Basher et al ( , 2016 proposed that the numéraire effect will influence the responses of the US dollar to an oil price shock, although such effects eventually dissipate. Kunkler and MacDonald (2019) also stated that another consequence of the numéraire effect is an aggregation bias for the relationship between a currency and the US dollar price of oil. Therefore, the investigation of the relationship between the US dollar price of oil and the US dollar, whether in nominal terms or in real terms, could result in a misleading oil-dollar dependence.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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