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Wholesale electricity price volatility and price bounds: a market comparison

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Due to high volatility and frequent price spikes in wholesale electricity market prices, market regulators often impose price bounds on auction and final market prices. This paper applies a model-free intraday-range measure and ARMA-EGARCH(1,1) models to wholesale electricity price data collected from seven markets in the United States and Europe to measure and compare volatilities across the seven markets and the effects of exogenous amendments to price bounds in a subsample of three markets. The paper concludes that the wider a market’s imposed price bounds, the higher the price volatility. Conclusions also suggest that exogenous price bound changes have more significant effects in markets with tighter imposed bounds and that changes made to locational marginal price bounds have greater effects on price behavior than do changes made to energy offer price bounds. Conclusions add to emerging research about the effects of price bounds on electricity price volatility and are relevant for policy makers and market participants concerned with price volatility.
Autores principais:Troy IV, William
Assunto:Wholesale electricity market Price volatility Intraday range Price bounds
Ano:2017
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:dissertação de mestrado
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:Due to high volatility and frequent price spikes in wholesale electricity market prices, market regulators often impose price bounds on auction and final market prices. This paper applies a model-free intraday-range measure and ARMA-EGARCH(1,1) models to wholesale electricity price data collected from seven markets in the United States and Europe to measure and compare volatilities across the seven markets and the effects of exogenous amendments to price bounds in a subsample of three markets. The paper concludes that the wider a market’s imposed price bounds, the higher the price volatility. Conclusions also suggest that exogenous price bound changes have more significant effects in markets with tighter imposed bounds and that changes made to locational marginal price bounds have greater effects on price behavior than do changes made to energy offer price bounds. Conclusions add to emerging research about the effects of price bounds on electricity price volatility and are relevant for policy makers and market participants concerned with price volatility.