by peripato » Tue 21 Jun 2011, 23:55:04
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hughj', 'O')K......so all my new friends at PO say it isn't traders (will someone please tell Obama),
it isn't the oil companies, certainly isn't the consumer, so what drove prices from 60 to 147
to 30 in a matter of months????? I'm listening.......
Hugh
There you go;
Does queueing theory explain oil's wild price swings?$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')n acquaintance from years ago, Suzy Sachs, pointed out an additional consequence. As a systems engineer, she knew that queueing theory predicts that queues behave in a noisy and chaotic manner when demands approach the system capacity. In the grocery store, in the bank, or at the airport, queues tend to be unpredictably very long or very short. Instead of energy prices rising to a new stable level, wild price oscillations will result from short-term changes in demand. There will be a tendency, the first time that prices go down, to announce that the crisis is over and oil and gas are now cheap and abundant again.
No need to blame speculators, OPEC, Greenies or any other figment of your imagination...