Article, 2023

Co-movement between dirty and clean energy: A time-frequency perspective

Energy Economics, ISSN 0140-9883, Volume 119, 10.1016/j.eneco.2023.106565

Contributors

Farid S. [1] Karim S. [2] Naeem M.A. 0000-0001-6962-3175 (Corresponding author) [3] Nepal R. [4] Jamasb T. 0000-0003-2785-7007 [5]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Management and Technology
  2. [NORA names: Pakistan; Asia, South];
  3. [2] Sunway University
  4. [NORA names: Malaysia; Asia, South];
  5. [3] United Arab Emirates University
  6. [NORA names: United Arab Emirates; Asia, Middle East];
  7. [4] University of Wollongong
  8. [NORA names: Australia; Oceania; OECD];
  9. [5] Copenhagen Business School
  10. [NORA names: CBS Copenhagen Business School; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

In the backdrop of the recent covid-19 pandemic there is a renewed interest to understand the interlinkages between dirty and clean energies. In this regard, the study examines the co-movement structure between clean energy stocks and dirty energies before and during the covid-19 outbreak. The study analyses the interlinkages between the underlying markets by utilizing a vast sample of dirty energies namely crude oil, heating oil, gas oil, gasoline and natural gas, whereas clean energy sector is proxied by S&P Global clean energy index and Wilder Hill clean energy index. We make use of rolling window wavelet approach and wavelet coherence analysis to identify interdependencies between the clean energy stocks and dirty energies. The results exhibit weak linkages between clean energy equities and dirty energies in the short-run, while; we also record few occasions of high co-movements among dirty and clean energy markets in the long-run. Noticeably, a distinct decoupling effect persisted between dirty and clean energy markets. In addition, the findings also illustrate that clean energy market is relatively isolated from dirty energies during the recent pandemic crisis, amplifying portfolio diversification benefits across clean and dirty energy markets. The findings of the study hold meaningful insights for investors, policy makers and other market participants in energy financial markets.

Keywords

Clean-energy stocks, Co-movement, Dirty energy markets, Wavelet coherence, Wavelet correlations

Data Provider: Elsevier