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Crude Palm Oil Price Forecasting in Malaysia: An Econometric Approach

Norlin Khalid · Hakimah Nur Ahmad Hamidi · Sharmila Thinagar · Nur Fakhzan Marwan (Universiti Teknologi MARA (UiTM) Kedah) ·Jurnal Ekonomi Malaysia ·2018

This paper aims to forecast the performance of crude palm oil price (CPO) in Malaysia by comparing several econometric forecasting techniques, namely Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL), Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) and Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average with exogenous inputs (ARIMAX). Using monthly time series data spanning from 2008 to 2017, the main results revealed that ARIMAX model is the most accurate and the most efficient model as compared to ARDL and ARIMA in forecasting the crude palm oil price. The results also show that the spot price of palm oil is highly influenced by stock of palm oil, crude petroleum oil price and soybean oil price. The empirical findings provide some insights for decision making and policy implementations, including the formulation of strategies to help the industry in dealing with the price changes and thus enable the Malaysian palm oil industry to continue dominating the international market.

Long Run Dynamic Relationships between Oil Prices, Exchange Rates, Stock Market and Interest Rate in Malaysia

Sabariah Nordin · Afiruddin Tapa · Hamdan Al-Jaifi ·International Journal of Supply Chain Management ·2018

This study intends to identify the long run relationships between oil price, exchange rates, stock market and interest rate in the context of Malaysia. Weekly data from 1 January 2006 until 22 April 2018 were used. Unit root tests of ADF and PP reveal that all variables are non-stationary at level and become integrated and stationary at first differential series, hence ratify that these variables can be used for further long run investigation. An ARDL bound test and Johansen and Juselius cointegration test suggest the existence of actual long-run relationship between oil price, stock price index, exchange rate and interest rate in Malaysia. Results of Granger causality indicates the presence of unidirectional causality between oil prices and Malaysian stock market running from oil prices to the stock price index. Results also suggest that there is a presence of bidirectional causality between interest rate and oil prices which means causality is running from interest rate to oil prices and from oil prices to the interest rate. Lastly, the results also propose that there is an existence of uni-directional causality between exchange rate and oil prices, running from the exchange rate to the oil prices at 10 percent significance level. Even the results of wavelet coherence approach confirm long run relationships between the underlying variables.

External and Internal Shocks and the Movement of Palm Oil Price: SVAR Evidence from Malaysia

Mohd Azlan Shah Zaidi · Zulkefly Abdul Karim · Noor Amirah Zaidon ·Economies ·2022

Movements in palm oil price give important signals to various stakeholders of the palm oil industry in Malaysia. Thus, understanding external and internal factors that may affect the palm oil price is vital to the industry players for sustainability of their activities. This study investigates relative importance of external and internal shocks on the movement of palm oil price in Malaysia. Employing a structural vector autoregressive (SVAR) model on quarterly data from 1990 to 2019, the findings reveal that external shocks are more dominant in affecting the palm oil price. Shocks to the crude oil price, the prices of substitution goods (soybeans oil, rapeseed oil, and sunflower oil), the world palm oil price, and foreign income significantly affect the palm oil price in the short and medium run. The results also indicate that a shock to soybean oil price has a more profound effect on the palm oil price than a shock to rapeseed oil or sunflower oil prices, respectively. Likewise, shocks to incomes from India as well as from Netherlands create greater impacts on the palm oil price than a shock to income from the other trading partners, respectively. The study has shown the importance of external factors in affecting the palm oil industry.

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