Abstract

Purpose This study aims to establish the dynamic relationship between international crude oil prices and Indian stock prices represented by the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) energy index. Design/methodology/approach Using Johansen’s cointegration test, vector error correction (VEC) model, impulse response function and variance decomposition test the study tries to ascertain the short-term and long-term dynamic association between the oil price shock and the movement of stock price and Granger causality test is applied to find out the nature of causality. Findings Considering vector autoregression estimation, the present study analyzes the relationship between the variables and tries to make a valid conclusion. The result of the co-integration test exhibits the presence of a long-term association between these two macro-economic variables during the period under study. Also, in the short-run VEC Granger causality result reveals that the movement of international crude oil price significantly influences the Indian stock price. Research limitations/implications To get a more robust result the study can be further extended by taking a longer time period with data of shorter time-frequency such as daily or weekly and further by using more sophisticated econometric and statistical tools. Further, the study can be extended to firm-level investigation considering the forward trading concentration with the Indian oil basket. Social implications In today’s globalized era, forecasting of share price movement helps investors in predicting the market and invest accordingly. Through this liquidity of the markets enhance and markets become more active in the global arena. Originality/value This study represents fresh findings in the changing time period the linkage between crude oil prices and stock prices which are of value to the academicians, researchers, policymakers, investors, market regulators, etc.

Highlights

  • Crude oil is a worldwide required energy product treated as the most essential product to run the different essential activities

  • The study applies augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and PP tests for determining the stationarity property of the variables

  • The unit test results reported in the tables (Tables 2 and 3) advocate that oil price and Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) Energy indices are non-stationary in level due to acceptance of the null hypothesis of having unit root

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Summary

Introduction

Crude oil is a worldwide required energy product treated as the most essential product to run the different essential activities. The growth of industrial production of any country and its requirement of crude oil is highly and positively interrelated (Mitra, 2018). It clearly indicates that among the countries of the globe, the economy of India is one of the world’s most rapidly growing economies. Besides these, strengthening of the standard of living, increasing population, the advancement of the technological and economic climate of emerging economies like India have been a major factor for the rising demand for crude oil (Rahman, 2020). The persistent increasing demand and dependency of the economy on oil have captured one of the strategic positions in the Global among energy indices. It is very crucial to understand the linkage between oil price and share price for risk managers, policymakers to manage investment and financial decisions

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