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The usefulness of oil price forecasts—Evidence from survey predictions

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This paper evaluates survey forecasts for crude oil prices and discusses the implications for decision makers. A novel disaggregated data set incorporating individual forecasts for Brent and Western Texas Intermediate… Click to show full abstract

This paper evaluates survey forecasts for crude oil prices and discusses the implications for decision makers. A novel disaggregated data set incorporating individual forecasts for Brent and Western Texas Intermediate is used. We carry out tests for unbiasedness, sign accuracy, and forecast encompassing, followed by the computation of coefficients for topically oriented trend adjustments and the Theil's U measure. We also control for the forecast horizon finding heterogeneous results. Forecasts are more precise for shorter horizons, but less accurate than the naA¯ve prediction. For longer horizons, topically oriented trend adjustments become more pronounced, but forecasters tend to outperform the naA¯ve predictions.

Keywords: price forecasts; survey; oil price; usefulness oil; forecasts evidence; oil

Journal Title: Managerial and Decision Economics
Year Published: 2018

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