AgEcon Search

AgEcon Search >
       Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM) >
          Energy: Resources and Markets >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://purl.umn.edu/120051

Title: Why do Firms Hold Oil Stockpiles?
Authors: Mason, Charles F.
Authors (Email): Mason, Charles F. (bambuzlr@uwyo.edu)
Keywords: Petroleum Economics
Stochastic Dynamic Optimization
JEL Codes: Q2
D8
L15
Issue Date: 2011-12
Series/Report no.: ERM
100.2011
Abstract: Persistent and significant privately-held stockpiles of crude oil have long been an important empirical regularity in the United States. Such stockpiles would not rationally be held in a traditional Hotelling-style model. How then can the existence of these inventories be explained? In the presence of sufficiently stochastic prices, oil extracting firms have an incentive to hold inventories to smooth production over time. An alternative explanation is related to a speculative motive - firms hold stockpiles intending to cash in on periods of particularly high prices. I argue that empirical evidence supports the former but not the latter explanation.
URI: http://purl.umn.edu/120051
Institution/Association: Fondazione Eni Enrico Mattei (FEEM)>Energy: Resources and Markets
Total Pages: 39
Collections:Energy: Resources and Markets

Files in This Item:

File Description SizeFormat
NDL2011-100.pdf448KbPDFView/Open
Recommend this item

All items in AgEcon Search are protected by copyright.

 

 

Brought to you by the University of Minnesota Department of Applied Economics and the University of Minnesota Libraries with cooperation from the Agricultural and Applied Economics Association.

All papers are in Acrobat (.pdf) format. Get Adobe Reader

Contact Us

Powered by: