We forecast monthly crude oil volatility dynamics using an interpretable machine learning framework applied to a long sample period from 1986 to 2023, encompassing multiple economic cycles, including four NBER-defined recessions, and incorporating 140 macroeconomic and uncertainty variables. Tree-based models (Random Forest and XGBoost) deliver the strongest out-of-sample forecasting performance, though their relative advantage varies across economic regimes. Uncertainty indicators, rather than oil-specific fundamentals, are the most influential predictors, indicating that oil volatility is primarily shaped by broader uncertainty conditions. Time-varying interpretability analyses reveal that the superior performance of tree-based models stems from their ability to flexibly combine multiple signals, an insight not captured by static importance scores. Our results highlight the value of dynamic interpretability in understanding regime-dependent machine learning behavior and offer guidance for volatility modeling.
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Kang et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a765cbbadf0bb9e87da730 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10614-025-11299-z
Yeonchan Kang
Doojin Ryu
Robert I. Webb
Computational Economics
University of Virginia
Sungkyunkwan University
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