by khebab » Tue 05 Apr 2005, 14:27:12
I think is in part right in particular about speculation. For instance, concerning Hedge funds:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')on-commercials, which primarily consist of hedge funds, bought 3,378 contracts of crude futures and options on the New York Mercantile Exchange, according to data released Friday by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Non-commercials were net long 112,002 contracts of crude futures and options as of Mar 29, the highest long position since June 1, according to the Commitments of Traders report. Despite the additional purchases made by non-commercials crude moved sideways during the reporting period, range bound between $52.50-$55.50/bbl. Non-commercials sold 1,575 contracts of unleaded gasoline futures and options, leaving them net long 39,093 lots. Non-commercials sold 2,833 contracts of heating oil futures and options, leaving them net long 5,809 lots.
src:
PlattsThe Gulf of Mexico production is not fully back online:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')On top of all this supply/demand misery for consumers, be aware that at the time you're probably reading this, the postý Hurricane Ivan cleanup still isn't done. When the storm traversed the Gulf of Mexico in September, its enormous waves and mass movement of sea mud damaged oil platforms and pipelines there and on the US mainland. Not all of the lost production is expected to be back on-line by Ivanýs one-year anniversary. One month after Ivan, the loss stood at about 475,000 bbl/day, or about 28% of pre-storm Gulf capacity. Although that figure isn'ýt even 1% of total world supply (or demand), in a market so tight it continues to matter a lot.
However, he avoids the problem of the underestimation of the demand growth.