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Main Authors: Schlüter, Stephan, Pappert, Sven, Neumann, Martin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.16723
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author Schlüter, Stephan
Pappert, Sven
Neumann, Martin
author_facet Schlüter, Stephan
Pappert, Sven
Neumann, Martin
contents Reliable gas price forecasts are an essential information for gas and energy traders, for risk managers and also economists. However, ahead of the war in Ukraine Europe began to suffer from substantially increased and volatile gas prices which culminated in the aftermath of the North Stream 1 explosion. This shock changed both trend and volatility structure of the prices and has considerable effects on forecasting models. In this study we investigate whether modern machine learning methods such as neural networks are more resilient against such changes than statistical models such as autoregressive moving average (ARMA) models with conditional heteroskedasticity, or copula-based time series models. Thereby the focus lies on interval forecasting and applying respective evaluation measures. As data, the Front Month prices from the Dutch Title Transfer Facility, currently the predominant European exchange, are used. We see that, during the shock period, most models underestimate the variance while overestimating the variance in the after-shock period. Furthermore, we recognize that, during the shock, the simpler models, i.e. an ARMA model with conditional heteroskedasticity and the multilayer perceptron (a neural network), perform best with regards to prediction interval coverage. Interestingly, the widely-used long-short term neural network is outperformed by its competitors.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2407_16723
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Interval Forecasts for Gas Prices in the Face of Structural Breaks -- Statistical Models vs. Neural Networks
Schlüter, Stephan
Pappert, Sven
Neumann, Martin
Machine Learning
Reliable gas price forecasts are an essential information for gas and energy traders, for risk managers and also economists. However, ahead of the war in Ukraine Europe began to suffer from substantially increased and volatile gas prices which culminated in the aftermath of the North Stream 1 explosion. This shock changed both trend and volatility structure of the prices and has considerable effects on forecasting models. In this study we investigate whether modern machine learning methods such as neural networks are more resilient against such changes than statistical models such as autoregressive moving average (ARMA) models with conditional heteroskedasticity, or copula-based time series models. Thereby the focus lies on interval forecasting and applying respective evaluation measures. As data, the Front Month prices from the Dutch Title Transfer Facility, currently the predominant European exchange, are used. We see that, during the shock period, most models underestimate the variance while overestimating the variance in the after-shock period. Furthermore, we recognize that, during the shock, the simpler models, i.e. an ARMA model with conditional heteroskedasticity and the multilayer perceptron (a neural network), perform best with regards to prediction interval coverage. Interestingly, the widely-used long-short term neural network is outperformed by its competitors.
title Interval Forecasts for Gas Prices in the Face of Structural Breaks -- Statistical Models vs. Neural Networks
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.16723