I heard a report on NPR (rofl, i'm a liberal idiot, sorry) that speculators have piled into oil because it is rising faster than other investments, and that without the speculators, oil would be around $60-70 a barrel.I've read a teeny bit about forward contracts and futures, but what I can't fathom, is how the price of oil (or any commodity I suppose) can be driven up so high, completely on paper - meaning, some of these contracts don't actually involve the swapping of the commodity. How is this legal, that the price I pay for gasoline is being manipulated by someone that never has to transport, store, or sell the actual commodity, just a paper guarantee.It just doesn't feel....right?
4/16/2008 1:54:36 PM
Read this. It's pretty well explained in layman's terms.http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/2006/05/29/8378002/index.htmAlthough, this is not to say that speculation is solely responsible for the current prices of oil. There are myriad factors at play, but the article focuses on the speculation component.]]
4/16/2008 1:55:47 PM
4/16/2008 10:02:23 PM
LoneSnark really needs to check his pager.
4/16/2008 10:30:44 PM
4/16/2008 10:33:39 PM
To further aggravate the market, you've got the collapsing US dollar. Oil is priced in USD, so as the value of the dollar drops, even if the actual value of the oil doesn't change, the price will still rise for American consumers. When you add in the other myriad of factors from China to speculators, you've got the prices we're seeing today.
4/16/2008 10:46:08 PM
Nothing else to be added here. Well done everyone
4/17/2008 12:56:16 AM
My job is so much easier when other people do it for me.
4/17/2008 3:22:52 AM
Nothing to be added here.These are some pretty nasty shocks at an already stressed time for the economy. Rate cuts and parachute drops of cash can only provide hundred point bursts to the Dow for so long. Skills gap, real income stagnation, triple digit inflation on basic necessities, these are some serious fucking problems.I'd say there's plenty of discussion worth having about this topic. StellaArtois should be very curious about it. She and everyone else will inherit an economy greatly impacted by the ripple effects of artificial inflation by oil speculators. Those, and our equally irrational countermeasures to sacrifice food for energy with ethanol.I don't see a lot of solution-making going on in the investment world, either. People still treat solutions to the oil addiction as novelties for some reason.More broadly, everyone seems to be writing-down, preserving cash, and pretty generally, freaking the fuck out. I speak to a few people who see the cheap market as a buying opportunity, but the investor class doesn't exactly make up a good portion of society. We'll see what becomes of this ever-cheaper borrowing as solution to fiasco created by too-cheap-borrowing.The smart money says...well. Let's put it this way, it says the same thing in a lot of languages because it's in fucking Euros. The EU economy surpassed that of the United States within the last year. (Go look it up. I'll wait.) They are in a better position to barter with oil-producing nations in an oil-tightening marketplace. They even have oil-producing nations arguing on behalf of pricing oil in Euros already.Meanwhile, back at the ranch. People are losing their jobs. Until recently, I used to talk to them every day. But it's not the Mexicans fault any more than it's the Irish's fault. Or the Chinese's fault. Even though they usually blamed them by rule.We claim responsibility for our successes proudly in America. But we cower in the face of accountability when it comes to our failures.The fault is our own. Bush's own Labor Secretary openly speculates that the problem now seems to be a skills gap. The companies, innovation, and decent jobs are out there. Many of you will end up working for them, no doubt. But you're still living in a bubble. You represent about 5-10% of your own economy.Not enough skilled workers will work for IBM, SAS, Bayer, etc. after coming through our education system at globally competitive rates. Bottom line. That, or not enough people are willing to take the risk to start a business or whatever.
4/17/2008 4:02:09 AM
Thank you Bobby. Much of this makes sense, but some things still don't.
4/17/2008 10:22:56 AM
Gamecat, you are mixing up short term issues and long term issues. Oil prices, the weak dollar, bank insolvency, weak housing market, the current stagnation, all are short term problems and will solve themselves with time if we just let them. Oil is caught in a speculative bubble just as housing prices were. It will burst eventually and reasonably priced oil will be here again. The U.S. trade deficit is what is driving down the dollar, and the trade deficit is being driven by high oil prices. If you exclude oil from the trade deficit statistics, the U.S. trade deficit has been falling for the last three years. When the trade deficit improves then the dollar will improve, either from falling oil prices or surging exports. As for housing prices, they must find their floor. It is a painful process, but houses were bid up and now they must be bid down, and everyone is just waiting for that day, including the banks. We are getting close, existing home sales are growing every month as various regions of the country settle out price wise, enabling banks to finally begin liquidating their stock of foreclosures. And the current stagnation is just what we need to fix all these problems: imports including oil will fall, exports will continue growing, and the trade deficit and thus the dollar will improve. A general sense of desperation will encourage home sellers to drop their prices, restoring equillibrium sooner. As for the rest of your assertions they are long term issues. There is indeed a skill gap and it is why the less skilled in our society are falling behind. But this is a systemic problem due to bad education policy (I think education vouchers would fix it). But this problem only harms those individuals it hits, the system as a whole can survive it. Yes, the poorest of the poor get bad educations and therefore remain poor, but that is the end of the problem. If allowed to do so, wages will adjust (down) to keep them either employed or incarcerated. So, while I wish we would fix our education system, it is a doomsday situation, it has been broken for the last half century and could be ignored for another half century with the same costs we have already become accustomed to paying.
4/17/2008 10:45:52 AM
4/17/2008 11:55:10 AM
4/17/2008 12:48:35 PM
4/17/2008 1:32:38 PM
4/17/2008 3:45:23 PM
4/17/2008 3:57:08 PM
Inflation was in the double-digits by the late 70's. Does the term, "stagflation" ring a bell? The reality is that oil producers can meet demand in the short term. Inventories are pretty stable, even with OPEC underproducing by 2 or 3 million barrels per day. And that doesn't even factor in the oil that Iraq will bring once it's vast reserves are fully brought online. Prices are bound to stabilize or drop some in the next few years.
4/17/2008 4:15:31 PM
We don't need housing to get out of a recession. Hell, it is not yet assured we will have an recession, merely slower growth.
4/17/2008 4:47:01 PM
4/17/2008 5:59:49 PM
^yeah, and a lot of it also depends on OPEC. They have 80% of the world's known reserves, but set their quota to meet less than 40% of global demand. This, along with the turmoil in the region, keeps supply tight and prices artificially high. However, there was not a lot of new oil and gas exploration in the 90's when oil was trading for less than $20 a barrel. New exploration is ramping up, and we'll see the results of it in a decade or so.
4/17/2008 7:33:11 PM
4/21/2008 3:53:16 PM
4/21/2008 4:45:41 PM
4/22/2008 12:30:01 PM
4/22/2008 12:50:04 PM
4/22/2008 4:33:48 PM
Paging LoneSnarkhttp://edition.cnn.com/2008/BUSINESS/04/30/iran.oil.ap/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
4/30/2008 12:24:12 PM
Finally. Me and the zionist conspirators were waiting for Iran to sell out. After all the oil Iran exported to earn those dollars the least it could do was sell them at a massive loss buying rediculously inflated Euros. Now that Iran is out of dollars me and my fellow zionist conspirators are free to drive the dollar up, the Euro down, and cause oil prices to fall:
4/30/2008 12:53:07 PM
And as this affects the national currency reserves of other nations?
4/30/2008 1:49:25 PM
Is it any wonder we (zionist conspirators) are able to keep <other nations> poor when they insist on buying high and selling low?
4/30/2008 1:52:04 PM