How predictable are precious metal returns?
How predictable are precious metal returns?
This paper provides strong evidence of time-varying return predictability of three precious metals from January 1987 to September 2014. We use three variations of the variance ratio test, the nonlinear Brock, Dechert and Schieinkman test as well as the Hurst exponent to evaluate the time-varying return predictability of precious metals to reduce the risk of spurious results. Our full sample results report mixed findings where some tests indicate significant predictability while some suggest no predictability. However through a time-varying procedure, we show that each precious metal market goes through periods of significant predictability as well as periods of unpredictability. Therefore this finding suggests that return predictability does vary over time and is not a static, all-or-nothing condition and therefore is consistent with the adaptive market hypothesis. We also show that platinum is the most predictable of the three precious metals and silver the least predictable, which may be of great to investors who include precious metals in their investment portfolios.
precious metals, predictability, adaptive market hypothesis , market efficiency
1390-1413
Urquhart, Andrew
ee369df1-95b5-4cdf-bc24-f1be77357c03
2017
Urquhart, Andrew
ee369df1-95b5-4cdf-bc24-f1be77357c03
Abstract
This paper provides strong evidence of time-varying return predictability of three precious metals from January 1987 to September 2014. We use three variations of the variance ratio test, the nonlinear Brock, Dechert and Schieinkman test as well as the Hurst exponent to evaluate the time-varying return predictability of precious metals to reduce the risk of spurious results. Our full sample results report mixed findings where some tests indicate significant predictability while some suggest no predictability. However through a time-varying procedure, we show that each precious metal market goes through periods of significant predictability as well as periods of unpredictability. Therefore this finding suggests that return predictability does vary over time and is not a static, all-or-nothing condition and therefore is consistent with the adaptive market hypothesis. We also show that platinum is the most predictable of the three precious metals and silver the least predictable, which may be of great to investors who include precious metals in their investment portfolios.
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EJF accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 June 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 July 2016
Published date: 2017
Keywords:
precious metals, predictability, adaptive market hypothesis , market efficiency
Organisations:
Centre of Excellence for International Banking, Finance & Accounting
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 396646
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/396646
ISSN: 1351-847X
PURE UUID: f3f00c1d-a5c1-400d-89f9-bb799e4ac0ac
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Date deposited: 17 Jun 2016 13:02
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:39
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Author:
Andrew Urquhart
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