by peripato » Tue 19 Jul 2011, 19:01:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peeker01', 'W')ell, I feel like we are making some progress. All three of you admit that obscene profits
are being generated by oil futures traders. To do so, price movement has to occur, either up or
down. That's where the problem is.
When Goldman makes the public pronouncement that oil will be 200 by next summer, price seems
to go in their direction. When they say it has overheated and they call a top, like magic,
prices descend. The entire price excursion in 2008, from 50, to 147 and back to 50, happened
while demand was substantially the same. Sure demand was increasing, an yes, OPEC was
doing as instructed, making supply slightly more than demand. But not to this extent. Consumers
pay the price on the way up, unsophisticated investors pay on the way down.
I take no solace in the fact that my 401K benefits from Goldman's manipulation of oil markets,
anymore than I appreciate their manipulation of the mortgage markets. Enron was doing the exact
same thing with the electricity market in California when it hit 1000/MW. We all know what
happened to Enron.
You cannot seriously be suggesting that Goldman, or anyone else for that matter, can really manipulate the spot price of oil? Have you any idea the
number and value of oil contracts traded daily on the NYMEX? Many hundreds of billions of dollars and you're talking about a few hundred million in profits over the course of a whole year. Jesus wept, the stupidity.
Also, smart arse concern troll, why is it, if oil speculators are so good at manipulating prices higher, that the US has the lowest traded price of crude anywhere in the world? You think those nasty speculators would have done something about that by now.