Abstract

Fluctuations in the financial markets stem from the reactions of investors to both market activities and more wide-ranging macroeconomic indices. This research examines the interconnectivity between returns on exchange rates and crude oil prices for ten oil-importing countries. Quarterly data spanning the period from 2000Q1 to 2022Q4 was used in the estimation. Returns had to be calculated from raw data, which were exchange rates and crude oil prices. The research methodologies include quantile regression and VAR-GARCH estimations. The study revealed a long-term association between crude oil market returns and foreign exchange markets, with currency fluctuations negatively impacting crude oil returns. The spill-over effect from the currency market to the oil market is weaker than the transmission effect from the oil market to the currency market of oil-importing countries. In particular, it was empirically established that shocks from past volatility in the currency markets of countries that import oil had commensurately lower volatility in the oil market by 6 percent. Whereas, the spillover from the crude oil market to the currency market depicts that increased turbulence on the crude oil market in the current period stimulated 55.66 percent amplified volatility in the currency market for oil-importing nations. Oil returns had a volatility persistence value of 0.1255, ratifying the weak volatility persistence of oil returns. The size of the volatility persistence of exchange rate returns is 0.997, an indication of high volatility persistence for currency returns. The study found the absence of leverage effects for currency values given a positive coefficient with a magnitude of 0.8529. In other words, bad news does not cause higher turbulence in exchange rate returns than good news will. For crude oil returns, the size of the leverage effects term is -0.0529, which is negative and significant (p<.05), implying that bad news in oil-importing economies has asymmetric impacts on the volatility of returns on crude oil prices. In effect, the oil price returns react more strongly to bad news than these returns react to good news. The findings of the study underscore the intricate relationships between local currencies and energy prices within the context of a global financial market, highlighting the significance of understanding these dynamics for effective decision-making and risk management in an increasingly interconnected world. It was recommended, among others, that international collaboration amongst countries is crucial given the global nature of energy markets.

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