Double-Trouble – An Oil Bubble….

“As much as 60% of today’s crude oil price is pure speculation driven by large trader banks and hedge funds. It has nothing to do with the convenient myths of Peak Oil. It has to do with control of oil and its price. . . . Since the advent of oil futures trading and the two major London and New York oil futures contracts, control of oil prices has left OPEC and gone to Wall Street. It is a classic case of the tail that wags the dog.”[6]

U.S. Representative Bart T. Stupak, Democrat – Michigan, chairman of the subcommittee investigating commodity market speculation, attributes even a higher percentage of the oil price hike to market manipulation: “Speculations now account for about 70% of all benchmark crude trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, up from 37% in 200.”

Wall Street financial giants that created the Third World debt crisis in the late 1970s and early 1980s, the tech bubble in the 1990s, and the housing bubble in the 2000s are now hard at work creating the oil bubble. By purchasing large numbers of futures contracts, and thereby pushing up futures prices to even higher levels than current prices, speculators have provided a financial incentive for giant futures traders to buy even more oil and place it in storage….”

More at Counterpunch.

Comment:

Ah. Funny how intelligent people can think that the laws of supply and demand can explain the rate oil prices have shot up in the last two months. What a gas, eh?

Makes the environmentalists happy, the luddites chirpy, the nuclear industry and the Pentagon ecstatic and the big government lobby (the entire population) gets to vote in another big-government pol.

2 thoughts on “Double-Trouble – An Oil Bubble….

  1. We are facing a perfect storm concerning oil: increasing global demand, decreasing global supply, and decreasing value of the dollar. The last point has also led our creditors to start dumping their dollars, exchanging them for hard assets, including oil. This in turn further drives down the dollar and drives up oil. Call it speculation, but it is really just a prudent decision to exchange a depreciating asset for an appreciating one.

  2. Oh yes. I don’t disagree that it’s the time to be a speculator. It’s quite logical.
    But I am not sure the supply and demand is that much out of synch. I think it’s more a question of the dollar.

    Everything is about the dollar, which is really a question of belief in the US’s commitment to rectify its problems seriously, which right now is nil…
    Only Paul has actually tackled the banking/currency problem seriously, and that is about the only important problem in the US now…

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