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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Volatility transmission in the CO<inf>2</inf> and energy markets

M. Mansanet-batallerP. Soriano

subject

chemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryFinancial economicsGreenhouse gasVolatility swapEconomicsVolatility smilePetroleumEuropean Union Emission Trading SchemeVolatility (finance)Volatility transmissionVolatility risk premium

description

The main consequence of the launch, in 2005, of the European Union Emission Trading Scheme (EU ETS) has been the establishment of a price for carbon emissions. Thus, major energy producers in Europe are now aware of the impact of their polluting activities. The interest in analysing the carbon markets from a financial point of view has exponentially increased since the launch of the EU ETS. However, no research articles have focused their attention on the volatility transmission between CO 2 and energy markets. The aim of this paper is to fill this gap in the literature. Specifically, our particular interest is to examine whether or not conditional volatility is transmitted across those markets since the start the EU ETS. We consider not only non-linearity in the variance of each series but we also allow for the possibility that changes in volatility in one of the markets may spill over to the others. The results show that CO 2 is directly affected by its own volatility, and directly and indirectly (through the covariance) affected by the oil and natural gas volatility. Additionally, shocks originated in the CO 2 and oil markets have an impact on CO 2 volatility. Finally, the behaviour of oil volatility is similar to CO 2 volatility in what concerns volatility transmission but this is not the case for natural gas volatility.

https://doi.org/10.1109/eem.2009.5207131