TY - JOUR
T1 - Does oil impact gold during COVID-19 and three other recent crises?
AU - Tanin, Tauhidul Islam
AU - Sarker, Ashutosh
AU - Brooks, Robert
AU - Do, Hung Xuan
N1 - Funding Information:
We sincerely thank editors R.S.J. Tol and R. Smyth and two anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments, which have helped us enhance the quality of this manuscript.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/4
Y1 - 2022/4
N2 - The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has inspired an examination of the oil–gold prices nexus during four recent crises: the COVID-19 pandemic, the gold market crash, the European sovereign debt crisis, and the global financial crisis. Using daily data from May 2007–August 2021, we employ the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag method to reveal five novel findings. First, this study contrasts with much of the literature, which infers that the relationship between oil and gold prices is strongly positive. Second, we find no oil and gold price relationship in the long term during all the crisis periods. Third, oil prices have substantially lost their power to predict gold prices in recent times and the oil–gold price linkage is not functional across all crisis periods. Fourth, in the short term, only negative Brent and negative West Texas Intermediate price changes cause positive gold price changes during the pandemic and gold market crash, respectively. Fifth, Brent prices have shown no link to gold prices before COVID-19. We argue that gold prices are less sensitive to oil prices than ever, and the uncertainty resulting from the COVID-19 crisis has attracted investors to gold. Our main findings hold under robustness analyses using fractional cointegration/integration models, lag length, and heteroskedasticity-consistent standard errors.
AB - The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic has inspired an examination of the oil–gold prices nexus during four recent crises: the COVID-19 pandemic, the gold market crash, the European sovereign debt crisis, and the global financial crisis. Using daily data from May 2007–August 2021, we employ the nonlinear autoregressive distributed lag method to reveal five novel findings. First, this study contrasts with much of the literature, which infers that the relationship between oil and gold prices is strongly positive. Second, we find no oil and gold price relationship in the long term during all the crisis periods. Third, oil prices have substantially lost their power to predict gold prices in recent times and the oil–gold price linkage is not functional across all crisis periods. Fourth, in the short term, only negative Brent and negative West Texas Intermediate price changes cause positive gold price changes during the pandemic and gold market crash, respectively. Fifth, Brent prices have shown no link to gold prices before COVID-19. We argue that gold prices are less sensitive to oil prices than ever, and the uncertainty resulting from the COVID-19 crisis has attracted investors to gold. Our main findings hold under robustness analyses using fractional cointegration/integration models, lag length, and heteroskedasticity-consistent standard errors.
KW - COVID-19 pandemic
KW - European sovereign debt crisis
KW - Global financial crisis
KW - Gold market crash
KW - Nonlinear ARDL (NARDL)
KW - Oil and gold prices
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125745546&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.105938
DO - 10.1016/j.eneco.2022.105938
M3 - Article
C2 - 35250120
AN - SCOPUS:85125745546
SN - 0140-9883
VL - 108
JO - Energy Economics
JF - Energy Economics
M1 - 105938
ER -