Abstract

This study examines the time-frequency connectedness of food commodities (cereals, dairy, food, meat, vegetable oil, and sugar) in the Food and Agriculture Organization's world food indices. With a monthly-frequency dataset covering February 1990 to October 2021, we utilise the returns spillover index approach of Baruník and Křehlík (2018). The results are robust to the time-varying parameter vector autoregressive (TVP-VAR) connectedness approach. The findings explicate that food commodities are highly connected in the short- and long-term horizons. The dynamic total connectedness varies from 15% to 80% in the short term, 1% to 70%, in the medium-term, and 1% to 75% in the long-term, with high fluctuations in notable crisis periods. Contagious returns spillovers between food commodities are propagated by vegetable oil. Diversification and safe-haven properties of food commodities are consistently found in the meat market across tranquil and exuberant trading periods, respectively. The safe-haven role of sugar in recent episodes of financial crises is highlighted by our findings. The economic, policy, and portfolio implications of our results are discussed.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call