Since the mid 2000s, an increasing financialization of commodity futures
markets is taking place. This has fueled an ongoing discussion about the
effect of financial investments on the development of commodity prices.
Against this background, the trading activities of financial speculators
also come to the fore. There is the concern that such speculators can
cause irrational overshootings of agricultural commodity prices, e.g. in
the event of global production shocks. In such an event the decrease of
total supply induces a price surge menacing food security in developing
countries. Yet, the question emerges whether speculation aggravates this
price increase, eventually inducing a price bubble. The relevance of
this concern is reinforced by the fact that due to climate change an
increased frequency and severity of global agricultural production
shortfalls is at stake. If speculation evokes an additional threat to
food security in the event of a production shock, the political agenda
should not be confined to focus solely on the adaptation to climate
change. Instead, it is then also necessary to address speculative
activities on agricultural commodity markets. This book scrutinises
whether speculative bubbles can be identified in the event of severe
global production shocks. For this, a framework for tracing the
transmission of the futures price's development on the spot market is
developed. Using annual data from 1979-2012 for maize it is analysed
whether production shock related price bubbles occurred.