An Empirical Analysis of Hedging and Diversification Role of Commodity Futures as a Risk Management Tool
Date
2018
Authors
Jaiswal, Ritika
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Commodity futures have resurged as an excellent portfolio diversifier and hedge against
inflation over the last decade. Traditional and alternative asset managers are using
commodity futures as an investment vehicle for strategic and tactical allocations.
Strategic allocation of commodity futures is highly valued due to the benefits of longterm equity-like returns, diversification benefits due to low correlation with other asset
classes and inflation hedging potential. Numerous studies have been conducted to
examine the inflation hedging and diversification benefits of commodity futures. These
studies have examined the commodity futures as an investment tool for the passive
allocation in a portfolio of traditional asset mix such as stocks and bonds. However, they
have not focussed on the assessment of regime-dependent inflation hedging and
diversification role of commodity futures. In addition to the passive asset allocation,
commodity futures are used for the tactical asset allocation by designing the active
strategies which use the signals of momentum, hedging pressure and idiosyncratic
volatility. With the review of the literature, it is found that there is a lack of study which
examines the existence of time-varying conditional profitability of these strategies for
the commodity futures market in the Indian context. In order to address these issues,
primarily, this thesis aims to evaluate the inflation hedging and diversification benefits
of individual commodity futures by using the time-varying dynamics under the regimeswitching approach. Subsequently, it analyses the time-varying conditional profitability
of individual and combined strategies which are designed by using the momentum, term
structure and idiosyncratic volatility signals for the Indian commodity futures market.
The study uses a sample of 13 highly traded commodity futures contracts (gold,
silver, copper, zinc, aluminium, nickel, lead, cardamom, mentha oil, cotton, crude palm
oil, crude oil and natural gas) and three commodity indices (MCXMETAL,
MCXENERGY and MCXAGRI) for the study period of June 2006 to April 2016. It uses
the time-varying regime-switching approach of Markov Switching-Vector Error
Correction Model (MS-VECM) to assess the inflation hedging potential of these
commodity futures and commodity indices. The study results confirm the partial inflation
hedging ability of gold, silver, lead and CPO futures and marginal hedging potential of
copper and cotton futures. In addition, the hedging and diversification role of these6
commodity futures and indices are analysed using the regime-switching approach of
Markov Switching-Vector Autoregression (MS-VAR) model. The results signify that
commodity futures are an excellent tool for diversification of the portfolios of traditional
assets mix such as stocks and bonds.
In addition, the study analyses the time-varying conditional profitability of
momentum, term structure and idiosyncratic volatility strategies in the Indian commodity
futures market. The average monthly mean returns, Sharpe ratio, transaction costs and
time-varying risk-based performance evaluation confirm that strategies based on risk i.e
idiosyncratic volatility are more profitable compared to strategies based on momentum
returns and term structure yield. In addition, the study designs a combined strategyMomTS which incorporates the methodology of both momentum and term structure
strategies and combined strategy-MomIVol which uses the methodology of both
momentum and idiosyncratic volatility strategies. The performance evaluation of these
strategies confirms that MomIVol strategy gives the highest monthly average return of
25.57 percent compared to momentum, term structure, idiosyncratic volatility and
MomTS strategies which yield the average monthly returns of 7.17, 9.54, 11.59 and
16.68 percent, respectively.
The major contribution of the study to the existing literature and to the real time
practitioner is the design of a combined strategy, MomIVol which gives a better riskadjusted return compared to other strategies. In addition, the design of this kind of active
strategies plays an important role in the investment decision of institutional investors and
professional money managers such as hedge funds and commodity pool operators. The
findings of this study provide significant guidance to the investors in the tactical
allocation of commodity futures in their portfolio, not only to diversify their portfolio but
also to earn an exceptionally high abnormal returns.
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Keywords
School of Management