Abstract

The provision of public information in commodity markets is justified in part by the idea that public information generates consensus among market participants about the fundamental value of the commodity and reduces price volatility. Significant reductions in options-implied volatility following report releases have been presented as evidence of this market-calming effect. We scrutinize this finding in more detail by comparing implied volatility to realized volatility measures from intraday price data. We show that while implied volatility does indeed fall after report releases, realized volatility does not decrease. We measure realized volatility using intraday data and find evidence of much higher volatility on report days only within minutes of the report release. This pattern is consistent with changes in implied volatility being driven by the resolution of uncertainty about the information contained in the report, rather than changes in volatility expectations that may reflect the consensus among traders about forthcoming price volatility.

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