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Gold futures returns and realized moments : a forecasting experiment using a quantile-boosting approach

TLDR
The German Science Foundation (Project Macroeconomic Forecasting in Great Crises; Grant number: FR 2677/4/1) as mentioned in this paper has provided a grant for the project.
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This article is published in Resources Policy.The article was published on 2018-08-01 and is currently open access. It has received 8 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Realized variance & Futures contract.

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Citations
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Ensemble approach based on bagging, boosting and stacking for short-term prediction in agribusiness time series

TL;DR: The use of ensembles is recommended to forecast agricultural commodities prices one month ahead, since a more assertive performance is observed, which allows to increase the accuracy of the constructed model and reduce decision-making risk.
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Optimal forecast combination based on ensemble empirical mode decomposition for agricultural commodity futures prices

TL;DR: The results indicated that the prediction performance of EEMD combined model is better than that of individual models, especially for the 3‐days forecasting horizon, and the machine learning methods outperform the statistical methods to forecast high‐frequency volatile components.
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Time-Varying Risk Aversion and Realized Gold Volatility

TL;DR: In this article, the in-and out-of-sample predictive value of time-varying risk aversion for realized volatility of gold returns via extended heterogeneous autoregressive realized volatility (HAR-RV) models is studied.
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Hedging and safe-haven characteristics of Gold against currencies: An investigation based on multivariate dynamic copula theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the capacity of Gold to be a hedge or a safe-haven against the depreciation value of USD, EUR, and JPY on average and during extreme movement using the copula theory.
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The (Asymmetric) effect of El Niño and La Niña on gold and silver prices in a GVAR model

TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the inflation-hedging property of gold and silver from a novel perspective by analyzing the impact of a negative shock to the negative component of Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) anomalies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Is gold the best hedge and a safe haven under changing stock market volatility

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of gold and other precious metals relative to volatility (Volatility Index (VIX)) as a hedge and safe haven was evaluated using data from the US stock market.
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Does gold act as a hedge or a safe haven for stocks? A smooth transition approach

TL;DR: In this article, Baur and Lucey (2010) augmentation of their model to a smooth transition regression (STR) using an exponential transition function which splits the regression model into two extreme regimes: periods in which stock returns are on average and therefore allowing to test whether gold acts as a hedge for stocks, the other one accounts for extreme market conditions where the volatility of the stock returns is high.
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Is gold a hedge or safe haven against oil price movements

TL;DR: In this article, the role of gold as a hedge or safe haven against oil price movements is assessed using an approach based on copulas to analyse the dependence structure between these two markets.
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Optimal beliefs, asset prices, and the preference for skewed returns

TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider a general equilibrium model with complete markets and show that when investors hold beliefs that optimally balance these two incentives, portfolio holdings and asset prices match six observed patterns: (i) the cost of biased beliefs are typically second-order, investors typically hold biased assessments of probabilities and so are not perfectly diversified according to objective metrics; (ii) because the costs of biased belief temper these biases, the utility costs of the lack of diversification are limited; (iii) there is a complementarity between believing a state more likely and purchasing more of the asset
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Does realized skewness predict the cross-section of equity returns? ☆

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use intraday data to compute weekly realized moments for equity returns and study their time-series and cross-sectional properties, finding a strong relation between realized volatility and next week's stock returns.
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Q1. What have the authors contributed in "Gold futures returns and realized moments: a forecasting experiment using a quantile-boosting approach" ?

This paper proposes an iterative model-building approach known as quantile boosting to trace out the predictive value of realized volatility and skewness for gold futures returns. Controlling for several widely studied marketand sentiment-based variables, the authors examine the predictive value of realized moments across alternative forecast horizons and across the quantiles of the conditional distribution of gold futures returns. The authors find that the realized moments often significantly improve the predictive value of the estimated forecasting models at intermediate forecast horizons and across quantiles representing distressed market conditions. 

Furthermore, as Shrestha ( 2014 ) notes, one can expect price discovery to take place primarily in the futures market as the futures price responds to new information faster than the spot price due to lower transaction costs and ease of short selling associated with the futures contracts. The futures price data, in continuous format, are obtained from www. Based on the Jarque-Bera test statistic ( not reported ), the authors can reject normality of the sampling distribution of returns at the highest levels of significance, which provides some preliminary justification for modeling the quantiles rather than simply the mean of the conditional distribution of returns. By the same token, an analysis by means of the BDS test ( Brock et al., 1996 ; results are available upon request ) indicates, for various embedding dimensions, the presence of nonlinearity in the returns series, further strengthening the case for a quantiles-based modeling approach.