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Theoretical explanations for asymmetric relationships between gasoline and crude oil prices with focus on the US market
Author(s) -
Honarvar Afshin
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
opec energy review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1753-0237
pISSN - 1753-0229
DOI - 10.1111/j.1753-0237.2009.00170.x
Subject(s) - gasoline , crude oil , economics , market power , margin (machine learning) , focus (optics) , order (exchange) , econometrics , financial economics , microeconomics , petroleum engineering , chemistry , monopoly , computer science , physics , optics , finance , machine learning , engineering , organic chemistry
Asymmetric movements of gasoline and crude oil prices have been the focus of many studies since 1990s. Recent volatile crude oil prices in the global market have reignited interest in the link between gasoline and crude oil prices. Asymmetry between gasoline and crude oil prices is defined as the process of non‐symmetric response of gasoline prices to changes in crude oil prices. This study presents a survey of papers which address various aspects and explanations of asymmetry between gasoline and crude oil prices. The studies in this literature cover different stages of the market between retail gasoline and crude oil. Although the different studies employ different methodologies to uncover asymmetry, the reliability of some of the methods has been questioned. Several explanations are offered for asymmetry like retailer's market power, asymmetric role of inventories, consumer search costs and so on. With the exception of market power explanation, the explanations are compatible with competitive market hypothesis. The review, highlights inconsistencies between economic theories and employed models, and identifies importance of distinguishing between margin and pass‐through rate in future investigation.