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An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent

This study aims at analysing how African oil benchmarks within the OPEC Reference Basket relative to the WTI and Brent benchmarks which are considered as global pricing benchmarks for the period starting from 1997-2008. The Nigerian Bonny Light and Algerian Saharan blend were the two benchmarks used...

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Main Author: Awasom, Nde-Asaa
Other Authors: Holman, Glen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Awasom, Nde-Asaa
author2 Holman, Glen
author_browse Awasom, Nde-Asaa
Holman, Glen
author_facet Holman, Glen
Awasom, Nde-Asaa
author_sort Awasom, Nde-Asaa
collection Thesis
description This study aims at analysing how African oil benchmarks within the OPEC Reference Basket relative to the WTI and Brent benchmarks which are considered as global pricing benchmarks for the period starting from 1997-2008. The Nigerian Bonny Light and Algerian Saharan blend were the two benchmarks used for this study. A time series analysis was applied to the weekly price data series set and with the aid of a breakpoint unit root test and Cusum of Squared test to determine if there was a change in the persistence of the spread of each African benchmark relative to the global benchmarks. The results for from the unit root test indicated the presence of a structural break in the price spread in 2004 for the Bonny Light benchmark and in 2005 for the Saharan blend relative to both global benchmarks. The Cusum Squared test for the four benchmark pairings indicated a change in persistence of the price spreads. The null hypothesis was rejected for the alternative hypothesis of the price spread process having a relatively high persistence value after a while. The Cusum Test results showed a change in persistence for both African benchmarks relative to the WTI benchmark and no change in persistence relative to the Brent benchmark. The results of from the Time series analysis indicated the competitive nature of African benchmarks relative to global benchmarks and this could benefit exporting countries by virtue of setting up derivative markets. The derivative markets would allow for the trade of benchmark spreads, futures contracts, options and other financial instruments for African oil producers.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:23.309Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31406 An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent Awasom, Nde-Asaa Holman, Glen Crude oil Brent WTI Bonny Light Saharan Blend Breakpoint Unit Root Test Cusum Squares Test Price Spread Cusum Test This study aims at analysing how African oil benchmarks within the OPEC Reference Basket relative to the WTI and Brent benchmarks which are considered as global pricing benchmarks for the period starting from 1997-2008. The Nigerian Bonny Light and Algerian Saharan blend were the two benchmarks used for this study. A time series analysis was applied to the weekly price data series set and with the aid of a breakpoint unit root test and Cusum of Squared test to determine if there was a change in the persistence of the spread of each African benchmark relative to the global benchmarks. The results for from the unit root test indicated the presence of a structural break in the price spread in 2004 for the Bonny Light benchmark and in 2005 for the Saharan blend relative to both global benchmarks. The Cusum Squared test for the four benchmark pairings indicated a change in persistence of the price spreads. The null hypothesis was rejected for the alternative hypothesis of the price spread process having a relatively high persistence value after a while. The Cusum Test results showed a change in persistence for both African benchmarks relative to the WTI benchmark and no change in persistence relative to the Brent benchmark. The results of from the Time series analysis indicated the competitive nature of African benchmarks relative to global benchmarks and this could benefit exporting countries by virtue of setting up derivative markets. The derivative markets would allow for the trade of benchmark spreads, futures contracts, options and other financial instruments for African oil producers. 2020-02-28T14:03:25Z 2020-02-28T14:03:25Z 2019 2020-02-28T11:04:07Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31406 eng Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Crude oil
Brent
WTI
Bonny Light
Saharan Blend
Breakpoint Unit Root Test
Cusum Squares Test
Price Spread
Cusum Test
Awasom, Nde-Asaa
An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
title_full An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
title_fullStr An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
title_short An analysis of the OPEC Reference Basket with regards to African Pricing and Spread to the WTI and Brent
title_sort analysis of the opec reference basket with regards to african pricing and spread to the wti and brent
topic Crude oil
Brent
WTI
Bonny Light
Saharan Blend
Breakpoint Unit Root Test
Cusum Squares Test
Price Spread
Cusum Test
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31406
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