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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 12:37:47 PM
From: TideGlider4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 
Please explain how that works?

High gas prices are caused by speculation in oil futures



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 12:48:56 PM
From: TopCat5 Recommendations  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 224728
 
"High gas prices are caused by speculation in oil futures."

High gas prices are caused by not having a long term energy plan. How many times have we gone through this cycle and the politicians say that "there is no short term solution." That's what's being said today and that's right. But if we had implemented a "long term plan" three or four "no short term solutions" ago, we would now be enjoying the results of that long term plan.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 4:28:01 PM
From: Wayners1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224728
 
Doesn't cause long term trends but certainly causes prices to way overshoot on the upside and downside.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 9:54:23 PM
From: Hope Praytochange3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 
Price Shock: Watch Cost of Gas Jump 10 Cents During ABC’s ‘World News’ Broadcast

The headlines of major newspapers and TV networks this week have been dominated by rising gas prices.

Drivers across the country have shared their stories on the cost - with many already paying more than $4 a gallon at the pump. There have even been reports of gas prices rising at a rate of 10 to 15 cents in a matter of hours.

Read: How high will gas prices go?

The swiftness at which those gas prices continue to climb was crystal clear Wednesday night during the broadcast of ABC News’ “World News with Diane Sawyer.”

As ABC News’ Cecilia Vega introduced her piece on high gas prices, the sign at the downtown Los Angeles gas station behind her showed the price of regular gas at $4.99 a gallon. However when the piece concluded nearly two minutes later the price of regular gas had jumped 10 cents to $5.09 a gallon.

BEFORE:

AFTER:

Even Vega seemed truly surprised to see such a drastic change in such a short period of time, telling Sawyer that “it is almost too unbelievable to believe.”

“It went up 10 cents?” asked Sawyer, herself shocked at what just had occurred.

“Ten cents during that two minutes while we were on the air,” confirmed Vega.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 9:55:19 PM
From: Hope Praytochange7 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 9:56:28 PM
From: Hope Praytochange4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/22/2012 9:57:38 PM
From: Hope Praytochange4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/27/2012 2:51:23 PM
From: JakeStraw2 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224728
 



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/28/2012 9:28:00 AM
From: TimF1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224728
 
The Silly Oil Speculation Meme
April 16, 2011, 10:10 am

Apparently, the leftish-progressive talking point du jour is that oil speculators (and wouldn’t you know it, those apparently include new libertarian uber-villains the Koch brothers) are artificially raising prices above what a “natural” market clearing price would be.

I have always presumed this to be possible for short periods of time – probably hours, perhaps days. But if, for any longer period of time, market prices (I am talking here about prices for current oil and immediate delivery, not futures prices) stay above the market clearing price one would normally expect from current supply and demand, then oil has to be building up somewhere. People would be bending over backwards to sell oil into the market, and customers would be using less.

If futures speculation has somehow unanaturally driven up current prices, where is the oil building up? I understand the price can go up for future oil, because in futures the inventory is just paper. But the argument is that futures trading is driving up current oil prices. When the Hunt brothers tried to corner the silver market, they had to buy and buy and keep buying to sop up the inventory.

Sure, some folks may be storing oil on speculation (and by the way most oil companies are inventorying oil and gasoline this time of year in the annual build up between heating oil season and summer driving season) — but storing physical oil is really expensive. And the total capacity to do so incrementally is trivial compared to world daily demand. A few tanker loads sitting offshore is not going to mean squat (total world crude inventory is something like 350 million barrels at any one time, so adding a million barrels into storage only increases inventory by 0.3% or about. Another way to look at it is that storing a million barrels of oil represents about 17 minutes of daily demand. If the price is really being held above the market clearing price, then we are talking about the necessity of buying millions of barrels of oil each and every day and storing them, and to keep doing so day after day after day to keep the price up. And then once you stop, the price is just going to crash before you can sell it because of the very fact that word got out you are selling it.

I dealt with this in a lot more depth here. I want to repost it in full. It’s a bit dated (different prices) but still relevant. Note in particular the irony of my friends point #5 — this was a real view held by many on the progressive Left. Ironic, huh?

I had an odd and slightly depressing conversation with a friend the other night. He is quite intelligent and well-educated, and in business is probably substantially more successful, at least financially, than I.

Somehow we got in a discussion of oil markets, and he seemed to find my position suggesting that oil prices are generally set by supply and demand laughable, so much so he eventually gave up with me as one might give up and change the subject on someone who insists the Apollo moon landings were faked. I found the conversation odd, like having a discussion with a fellow
chemistry PHD and suddenly having them start defending the phlogiston
theory of combustion. His core position, as best I could follow, was this:

1 -Limitations on supply in the US, specifically limitations on new oil field development and refinery construction, are engineered by oil companies attempting to keep prices high.

2 -Oil prices are set at the whim of oil traders in London and New York, who are controlled by US oil companies. The natural price of oil today should be $30 or $40, but oil traders keep it up at $60. While players upstream and downstream may have limited market shares, these traders act as a choke point that controls the whole market. All commodity markets are manipulated, or at least manipulatable, in this manner

3 - Oil supply and demand is nearly perfectly inelastic.

4 - If there really was a supply and demand reason for oil prices to shoot up to $60, then why aren’t we seeing any shortages?

5 - Oil prices only rise when Texas Republicans are in office. They will fall back to $30 as soon as there is a Democratic president. On the day oil executives were called to testify in front of the Democratic Congress recently, oil prices fell from $60 to $45 on that day, and then went right back up.

Ignoring the Laws of Economics (Price caps and floors)

While everyone (mostly) knows that we are suspending disbelief when the James Bond villain seems to be violating the laws of physics, there is a large cadre of folks that do believe that our economic overlords can suspend the laws of supply and demand. As it turns out, these laws cannot be suspended, but they can certainly be ignored. Individuals who ignore supply and demand in their investment and economic decision making are generally called “bankrupt,” at least eventually, so we don’t always hear their stories (the Hunt brothers attempt to corner the silver market is probably the best example I can think of). However, the US government has provided us with countless examples of actions that ignore economic reality.

The most typical example is in placing price caps. The most visible example was probably the 1970's era caps on oil, gasoline, and natural gas prices and later “windfall profit” taxes. The result was gasoline lines and outright shortages. With prices suppressed below the market clearing price, demand was higher and supply was lower than they would be in balance.

The my friend raised is different, one where price floors are imposed by industry participants or the government or more likely both working in concert. The crux of my argument was not that government would shy away from protecting an industry by limiting supply, because they do this all the time. The real problem with the example at hand is that, by the laws of supply and demand, a price floor above the market clearing price should yield a supply glut. As it turns out, supply guts associated with cartel actions to keep prices high tend to require significant, very visible, and often expensive actions to mitigate. Consider two examples:

Realtors and their trade group have worked for years to maintain a tight cartel, demanding a 6% or higher agency fee that appears to be increasingly above the market clearing price. The result of maintaining this price floor has been a huge glut of real estate agents. The US is swimming in agents. In an attempt to manage this supply down, realtors have convinced most state governments to institute onerous licensing requirements, with arcane tests written and administered by… the realtor’s trade group. The tests are hard not because realtors really need to know this stuff, but because they are trying to keep the supply down. And still the supply is in glut. Outsiders who try to discount or sell their own home without a realtor (ie, bring even more cheap capacity into the system) are punished ruthlessly with blackballs. I have moved many times and have had realtors show me over 300 houses — and you know how many For Sale By Owner homes I have been shown? Zero. A HUGE amount of effort is expended by the real estate industry to try to keep supply in check, a supply glut caused by holding rates artificially high.

A second example of price floors is in agriculture. The US Government, for whatever political reasons, maintains price floors in a number of crops. The result, of course, has been a supply glut in these commodities. Sopping up this supply glut costs the US taxpayer billions. In some cases the government pays to keep fields fallow, in others the government buys up extra commodities and either stores them (cheese) or gives them away overseas. In cases like sugar, the government puts up huge tarriff barriers to imports, otherwise the market would be glutted with overseas suppliers attracted by the artificially high prices. In fact, most of the current subsidy programs for ethanol, which makes almost zero environmental or energy policy sense, can be thought of as another government program to sop up excess farm commodity supply so the price floor can be maintained.

I guess my point from these examples is not that producers haven’t tried to impose price floors above the market clearing price, because they have. And it is not even that these floors are not sustainable, because they can be if the government steps in to help with their coercive power and our tax money to back them. My point is, though, that the laws of supply and demand are not suspended in these cases. Price floors above the market clearing price lead to supply gluts, which require very extensive, highly visible, and often expensive efforts to manage. As we turn now to oil markets, we’ll try to see if there is evidence of such actions taking place.

The reasons behind US oil production and refining capacity constraints

As to his first point, that oil companies are conspiring with the government to artificially limit oil production and refining capacity, this certainly would not be unprecedented in industry, as discussed above. However, any historical study of these issues in the oil industry would make it really hard to reach this conclusion here. There is a pretty clear documented record of oil companies pushing to explore more areas (ANWR, offshore) that are kept off-limits due to environmental pressures. While we have trouble imagining the last 30 years without Alaskan oil, the US oil companies had to beg Congress to let them build the pipeline, and the issue was touch and go for a number of years. The same story holds in refining, where environmental pressure and NIMBY concerns have prevented any new refinery construction since the 1970's (though after years and years, we may be close in Arizona). I know people are willing to credit oil companies with just about unlimited levels of Machiavellianism, but it would truly be a PR coup of unprecedented proportions to have maintained such a strong public stance to allow more capacity in the US while at the same time working in the back room for just the opposite.

The real reason this assertion is not credible is that capacity limitations in the US have very clearly worked against the interests of US oil companies. In production, US companies produce on much better terms from domestic fields than they do when negotiating with totalitarian regimes overseas, and they don’t have to deal with instability issues (e.g. kidnapping in Nigeria) and expropriation concerns. In refining, US companies have seen their market shares in refined products fall since the 1970s. This is because when we stopped allowing refinery construction in this country, producing countries like Saudi Arabia went on a building boom. Today, instead of importing our gasoline as crude to be refined in US refineries, we import gas directly from foreign refineries. If the government is secretly helping oil companies maintain a refining capacity shortage in this country, someone forgot to tell them they need to raise import duties to keep foreign suppliers from taking their place.

What Oil Traders can and cannot do

As to the power of traders, I certainly believe that if the traders could move oil prices for sustained periods as much as 50% above or below the market clearing price, they would do so if it profited them. I also think that speculative actions, and even speculative bubbles, can push commodity prices to short-term extremes that are difficult to explain by market fundamentals. Futures contracts and options, with their built in leverage, allow even smaller players to take market-moving positions. The question on the table, though, is whether oil traders can maintain oil prices 50% over the market clearing prices for years at a time. I think not.

What is often forgotten is that companies like Exxon and Shell control something like 4-5% each of world production (and that number is over-stated, since much of their production is as operator for state-owned oil companies who have the real control over production rates). As a point of comparison, this is roughly the same market Toshiba has in the US computer market and well below Acer’s. As a result, there is not one player, or even several working in tandem, who hold any real power in crude markets. Unless one posits, as my friend does, that NY and London traders somehow sit astride a choke point in the world markets.

But here is the real problem with saying that these traders have kept oil prices 50% above the market clearing price for the last 2-3 years: What do they do with the supply glut? We know from economics, as well as the historic examples reviewed above, that price floors above the clearing price should result in a supply glut. Where is all the oil?

Return to the example of when the Hunt’s tried to corner the silver market. Over six months, they managed to drive the price from the single digits to almost $50 an ounce. Leverage in futures markets allowed them to control a huge chunk of the available world supply. But to profit from it (beyond a paper profit) the Hunts either had to take delivery (which they were financially unable to do, as they were already operating form leveraged positions) or find a buyer who accepted $50 as the new “right” price for silver, which they could not. No one wanted to buy at $50, particularly from the Hunts, since they knew the moment the Hunt’s started selling, the price would crash. As new supplies poured onto the market at the higher prices, the only way the Hunt’s could keep the price up was to pour hundreds of millions of dollars in to buy up this excess supply. Eventually, of course, they went bankrupt. But remember the takeaway: They only could maintain the artificially higher commodity price as long as they kept buying excess capacity, a leveraged Ponzi game that eventually collapsed.

So how do oil traders’ supposedly pull off this feat of keeping oil prices elevated about the market clearing price? Well, there is only one way: It has to be stored, either in tanks or in the ground. The option of storing the extra supplies in tanks is absurd, especially over a period of years – after all, at its peak, $60 of silver would sit on the tip of my finger, but $60 of oil won’t fit in the trunk of my car. The world oil storage capacity is orders of magnitude too low. So the only real option is to store it in the ground, ie don’t allow it to get produced.

How do traders pull this off? I have no idea. Despite people’s image, the oil producer’s market is incredibly fragmented. The biggest companies in the world have less than 5%, and it rapidly steps down from there. It is actually even more fragmented than that, because most oil production is co-owned by royalty holders who get a percentage of the production. These royalty holders are a very fragmented and independent group, and will complain at the first sign of their operator not producing fast and hard enough when prices are high. To keep the extra oil off the market, you would have to send signals to a LOT of people. And it has to be a strong and clear signal, because price is already sending the opposite signal. The main purpose of price is in its communication value — a $60 price tells producers a lot about what and how much oil should be produced (and by the way tells consumers how careful to be with its use). To override this signal, with thousands of producers, to achieve exactly the opposite effect being signaled with price, without a single person breaking the pack, is impossible. Remember our examples and the economics – a sustained effort to keep prices substantially above market clearing prices has to result in visible and extensive efforts to manage excess supply.

Also, the other point that is often forgotten is that private exchanges can only survive when both Sellers AND buyers perceive them to be fair. Buyers are quickly going to find alternatives to exchanges that are perceived to allow sellers to manipulate oil prices 50% above the market price for years at a time. Remember, we think of oil sellers as Machiavellian, but oil buyers are big boys too, and are not unsophisticated dupes. In fact, it was the private silver exchanges, in response to just such pressure, that changed their exchange rules to stop the Hunt family from continuing to try to corner the market. They knew they needed to maintain the perception of fairness for both sellers and buyers.

Supply and Demand Elasticity

From here, the discussion started becoming, if possible, less grounded in economic reality. In response to the supply/demand matching issues I raised, he asserted that oil demand and supply are nearly perfectly inelastic. Well, if both supply and demand are unaffected by price, then I would certainly accept that oil is a very, very different kind of commodity. But in fact, neither assertion is true, as shown by example here and here. In particular, supply is quite elastic. As I have written before, there is a very wide range of investments one can make even in an old existing field to stimulate production as prices rise. And many, many operators are doing so, as evidenced by rig counts, sales at oil field services companies, and even by spam investment pitches arriving in my in box.

I found the statement “if oil prices really belong this high, why have we not seen any shortages” to be particularly depressing. Can anyone who sat in at least one lecture in economics 101 answer this query? Of course, the answer is, that we have not seen shortages precisely because prices have risen, fulfilling their supply-demand matching utility, and in the process demonstrating that both supply and demand curves for oil do indeed have a slope. In fact, shortages (e.g. gas lines or gas stations without gas at all) are typically a result of government-induced breakdowns of the pricing mechanism. In the 1970's, oil price controls combined with silly government interventions (such as gas distribution rules**) resulted in awful shortages and long gas lines. More recently, fear of “price-gouging” legislation in the Katrina aftermath prevented prices from rising as much as they needed to, leading to shortages and inefficient distribution.

Manipulating Oil Prices for Political Benefit

As to manipulating oil or gas prices timed with political events (say an election or Congressional hearings), well, that is a challenge that comes up all the time. It is possible nearly always to make this claim because there is nearly always a political event going on, so natural volatility in oil markets can always be tied to some concurrent “event.” In this specific case, the drop from $60 to $35 just for a Congressional hearing is not even coincidence, it is urban legend. No such drop has occurred since prices hit 60, though prices did drop briefly to 50. (I am no expert, but in this case the pricing pattern seen is fairly common for a commodity that has seen a runup, and then experiences some see-sawing as prices find their level.)

This does not mean that Congressional hearings did not have a hand in helping to drive oil price futures. Futures traders are constantly checking a variety of tarot cards, and indications of government regulatory activity or legislation is certainly part of it. While I guess traders purposely driving down oil prices ahead of the hearing to make oil companies look better is one possible explanation; a more plausible one (short of coincidence, since Congress has hearings on oil and energy about every other month) is that traders might have been anticipating some regulatory outcome in advance of the hearing, that became more less likely once the hearings actually occurred. *Shrug* Readers are welcome to make large short bets in advance of future Congressional energy hearings if they really think the former is what is occurring.

As to a relationship between oil prices and the occupant of the White House, that is just political hubris. As we can see, real oil prices rose during Nixon, fell during Ford, rose during Carter, fell precipitously during Reagan, were flat end to end for Bush 1 (though with a rise in the middle) and flat end to end for Clinton. I can’t see a pattern.

If Oil Companies Arbitrarily Set Prices, Why Aren’t They Making More Money?

A couple of final thoughts. First, in these heady days of “windfall” profits, Exxon-Mobil is making a profit margin of about 9% – 10% of sales, which is a pretty average to low industrial profit margin. So if they really have the power to manipulate oil prices at whim, why aren’t they making more money? In fact, for the two decades from 1983 to 2002, real oil prices languished at levels that put many smaller oil operators out of business and led to years of layoffs and down sizings at oil companies. Profit margins even for the larges players was 6-8% of sales, below the average for industrial companies. In fact, here is the profitability, as a percent of sales, for Exxon-Mobil over the last 5 years:

2006: 10.5%

2005: 9.7%

2004: 8.5%

2003: 8.5%

2002: 5.4%

2001: 7.1%

Before 2001, going back to the early 80's, Exxon’s profits were a dog. Over the last five years, the best five years they have had in decades, their return on average assets has been 14.58%, which is probably less than most public utility commissions allow their regulated utilities. So who had their hand on the pricing throttle through those years, because they sure weren’t doing a very good job! But if you really want to take these profits away (and in the process nuke all the investment incentives in the industry) you could get yourself a 15 to 20 cent decrease in gas prices. Don’t spend it all in one place.

** One of the odder and forgotten pieces of legislation during and after the 1972 oil embargo was the law that divided the country into zones (I don’t remember how, by counties perhaps). It then said that an oil company had to deliver the same proportion of gas to each zone as it did in the prior year (yes, someone clearly took this right out of directive 10-289). It seemed that every Representative somehow suspected that oil companies in some other district would mysteriously be hoarding gas to their district’s detriment. Whatever the reason, the law ignored the fact that use patterns were always changing, but were particularly different during this shortage. Everyone canceled plans for that long-distance drive to Yellowstone. The rural interstate gas stations saw demand fall way off. However, the law forced oil companies to send just as much gas to these stations (proportionally) as they had the prior year. The result was that rural interstates were awash in gas, while cities had run dry. Thanks again Congress.

coyoteblog.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/28/2012 9:29:01 AM
From: TimF2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 
Price gougers and speculators are the new witches

I actually wrote the previous post mentioning the speciousness of gouging/predatory pricing accusations last night but never got around to publishing it. This morning I woke up to this story about Obama and Holder demagoguing high gas prices:

Chicago Sun-Times | Julie Pace | Obama aims to ‘root out’ cause of high gas prices

RENO, Nev. — President Obama said Thursday that the Justice Department will try to “root out” cases of fraud or manipulation in oil markets, even as Attorney General Eric Holder suggested a variety of legal reasons may be behind gasoline’s surge to $4 a gallon.

“We are going to make sure that no one is taking advantage of the American people for their own short-term gain,” Obama said at a town-hall style meeting at a renewable energy plant in Reno. [...]

Obama, decrying such levels as yet another hardship “at a time when things were already pretty tough,” said Holder was forming the Financial Fraud Enforcement Working Group. The task force will focus some of its investigation on “the role of traders and speculators” in the oil-price surge, Obama said. The group will include several Cabinet department officials, federal regulators and the National Association of Attorneys General.

In Washington, Holder said he would press ahead with the investigation, even though he did not cite any current evidence of intentional manipulation of oil and gas prices or fraud.

This makes as much sense as saying that since your children are running fevers you will be launching a preemptive, evidence-less investigation into the thermometer manufacturers to make sure they aren't manipulating temperatures for their own selfish, short-term gains.

And by the way, you also hold the power of life and death over the thermometer industry. But not big deal, it's just a fact-finding investigation. You're totally not trying to intimidate or scapegoat anyone.

Holder did generously admit the following though:

“Based upon our work and research to date, it is evident that there are regional differences in gasoline prices, as well as differences in the statutory and other legal tools at the government’s disposal,” Holder said in a memo accompanying a statement announcing the task force. “It is also clear that there are lawful reasons for increases in gas prices, given supply and demand.”

So he has apparently re-discovered some bits of the Arrow-Debreu model regarding commodities in different places needing to be treated independently, and also tacitly acknowledges that on occasion markets may behave the way they do even without sinister Robber Barons pulling all the strings. How gracious of him.

How much previous "work and research" did it take them to figure this out? Anyone who has taken a road trip could have told him that. Anyone who has ever had a conversation about gas prices could have told him that. Anyone who knows that refineries are not uniformly distributed across the country and that it takes effort to transport liquids could have told him that. Anyone who knows the country is chopped up into different regions in the regulations governing refining and distribution of petroleum products could have told him that.

Matt Welch sums this up well:

Here's your federal energy policy: Do nothing significant to increase domestic supply, create mandates to have XX% of future supply come from magical green leprechauns, then when prices (surprise!) go up, you know what to do: Blame the "speculators".

If you don't get why I find this so absurd and ignorant listen to this EconTalk about price gouging with Mike Munger, and read this very comprehensive Coyote Blog post about oil speculation.

Let's be clear about one other thing: "speculation" just means making a bet about what the price of something will be in the future. When you bought your house, or signed a multi-month lease, or waited to buy a car, or contributed some money to your 401k plan, or sold your extra tickets to a football game, or bought your ham for Easter dinner a week ago, or bought swimsuits at then end of last summer YOU WERE SPECULATING.

Prices are dynamic across time. Buy cheap; sell dear. We all do it. There's nothing malevolent about it. Quite the contrary, it does everyone else a favor by shifting consumption of goods from when they are predicted to be (relatively) scarce to when they are thought to be (relatively) abundant.

Posted at 12:25 PM
southbend7.blogspot.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/28/2012 9:31:58 AM
From: TimF2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224728
 
Are Speculators Responsible for Today's Higher Oil Prices?

This week, Barack Obama joined much of the progressive Left in blaming recent increases in oil prices on nebulous and nefarious “speculators.” It’s a charge that has been leveled, and investigated, numerous times since the early 1970's. And its a charge that is as empty of truth as it has been frequent.

There’s very little that’s new in politics. In 301AD, the Roman Emporer Diocletian issued the edict of maximum prices, which set prices on a bewilderingly large array of goods. It was backed up by the death penalty on speculators, who were decried by Diocletian as a scourge worse than the barbarian hordes. As could be expected by our modern understanding of economics, the edicts mainly resulted in painful shortages of critical commodities. In fact, the original price increases that led to the edict were caused not by speculators, but by profligate government spending and a debasement of the currency (any of that sound familiar?)

In fact, it is almost impossible to find examples of private action sustaining an artificially high price floor. Only with the cooperation of an interventionist government are such sustained price floors possible — that’s why at one point or another in history we have had minimum prices set by the government for taxis, airline fares, rail freight rates, farm products and government-enforced limits on supply that have driven up prices of everything from attorneys to real estate agents to funeral homes to interior design.

The argument du jour is that speculators are driving up oil futures prices, and these higher futures prices in turn drive up prices of oil for current delivery. The first half of this argument has a ring of truth. It is much easier for bubbles to emerge in buy-and-hold type investment assets. Stocks, bonds, futures, and even houses can experience speculative bubbles. But do these bubbles spill over into current commodity prices?

There are two checks on current commodity values that make sustained speculative bubbles much less likely. First, physical commodities are really expensive to inventory. I can hold futures contracts on a million barrels of oil in my desk drawer; a million barrels of physical oil requires a container the size of 63 Olympic swimming pools. Second, the demand curve for oil futures is based on expectations and predictions and hope and fear. The demand curve for physical oil is grounded in the real economics of electricity generation and powering factories and driving trucks.

So lets consider speculation in this context. We start from a market in oil for current delivery that is in balance, where the price is such that supply and demand are roughly equal. Now, enter speculators. They supposedly drive the price up above this “natural” price. As the price rises, we know producers will seek ways to bring more oil to market, and consumers will reduce their consumption. The result is a glut – an excess of supply over demand. Here is the real question to ask if one suspects that speculators are driving the price of oil for current delivery above and beyond the market clearing price: Where is all the extra oil going?

Let’s consider the example of when the Hunt’s tried to corner the silver market in the late 1970s. Over six months, they managed to drive the price from $11 to almost $50 an ounce. Leverage in futures markets allowed them to control a huge chunk of the available world supply. But just driving the price up temporarily did not get them anywhere — to make the fortune they wanted, the prices had to go up and stay up. As prices rose, no one but the Hunt’s were buying, while new supplies flowed onto the market. The only way the Hunt’s could keep the price up was to pour hundreds of millions of dollars in to buy up this excess supply. Eventually, of course, they went bankrupt. They only could maintain the artificially higher commodity price as long as they kept buying and storing excess capacity, a leveraged Ponzi game that eventually collapsed.

So how do oil traders’ supposedly pull off this feat of keeping oil prices elevated above the market clearing price? Well, there is only one way: Excess supply created by the artificially high price has to be stored, either in tanks or in the ground.

In fact, the Koch Brothers (who else?) have recently been accused of buying several tankers just to store oil for speculative gain. Forgetting for a moment whether this makes any economic sense for them, even four full million-barrel tankers would only only increase world crude inventories just over 1%, and would effectively store just over an hour of world oil demand. To keep prices elevated, someone would have to be buying this amount of oil every day, and keep on buying and storing this amount indefinitely.

Certainly this would bankrupt anyone in the attempt — it would cost something like $80 billion (just for the oil) to maintain this game for six months and require storage larger than the entire US strategic petroleum reserve. So it should not be surprising that we see no such trends in inventories. Crude oil and gasoline inventories are among the most carefully watched economic statistics there are. Crude oil inventories always rise this time of year (in anticipation of summer gasoline demand) and the rise in inventory this year has been well within historic norms. Gasoline inventories have actually been falling, indicating that the price of gas is perhaps a bit too low.

The only real option for raising prices is to store the oil in the ground — in other words, don’t allow it to get produced in the first place.

How do speculators pull this off? I have no idea. Despite people’s image, the oil producer’s market is incredibly fragmented. The biggest companies in the world have less than 5% share of world production, and it rapidly steps down from there. It is actually even more fragmented than that, because most oil production is co-owned by royalty holders who get a percentage of the production. Producers and royalty holders are a very fragmented and independent group, and have every incentive to produce fast and hard when prices are high.

Is there a crime in the current oil prices? Yes, but it’s not one of speculation. Prices are a form of communication. Higher prices tell consumers to use less oil, and producers to go find more. The real crime today is that while the signal is flashing today to oil companies to go find more crude, the Obama administration has bent over backwards to make such efforts all but impossible. In fact, the Obama Administration desperately tried and failed to increase oil and gas prices via cap and trade last year. President Obama is not really against higher oil prices, he just wants them driven higher by the state, not by the markets.

forbes.com



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (124551)2/28/2012 9:37:25 AM
From: TimF1 Recommendation  Respond to of 224728
 
..Assume for sake of argument that speculative activity in a commodity derivatives market has distorted the price of the commodity; convergence implies that if nearby futures prices are indeed distorted, physical prices have to be distorted too. Millions–and in some cases billions–of individual consumers, and myriad producers, face these prices. If these producers and consumers are not playing the same learning game that is going on in the futures market, the price distortion will affect their production and consumption decisions. All else equal, if speculators cause the price to be too high, consumption will be depressed, and production will increased. This will lead to an accumulation of inventories. If the price distortion is large, the inventory accumulation is likely to be large.

Now, there are circumstances in which it may be difficult to detect empirically the inventory accumulation. If supply and demand are extremely–extremely–inelastic, large price moves may result in small inventory changes that are hard to detect in the noisy stock data that are available for some commodities. Moreover, all else may not be equal. As Singleton (perhaps cleverly) notes, my research shows that a decline in fundamental uncertainty could lead to a decline in inventory that masks the speculation-induced change. (Although more plausibly, higher fundamental volatility leads to greater speculation, which would lead to an increase in inventory that could be blamed on speculative price distortions.)

But there are historical episodes–like the Hunts in silver and government price-support programs–in which price distortions have been associated with huge accumulations of inventory. Those claiming speculative distortion need to provide a credible explanation whenever an alleged price bubble is not accompanied by a rise in inventories. It can happen, but it’s unlikely–so show me how.

So, for the Singleton story to work, it has to be the case that consumers and producers–or at least a big chunk of them–are playing the same learning game as the investors. I find this wildly implausible, particularly for consumers. Would consumers really buy more gasoline today–gasoline which they are going to consume, not store in anticipation of profiting from price appreciation–for speculative reasons because prices have been trending up? Really? (Perhaps you could argue that they would engage in intertemporal substitution, but this also stretches credulity.) It might be somewhat more plausible that suppliers would not produce more today in response to a speculative price bubble in anticipation that they can sell at a higher price in the future.

These stories–and they are just that–are not logically impossible, but they are just implausible, to me anyways. The consumer side is particularly implausible. To emphasize: most consumers of gasoline or copper or corn or whatever cannot store the commodity, and hence cannot earn a speculative profit. Thus, they should respond parametrically to prices, and respond to higher prices by reducing consumption. The decline in consumption in markets (like the US) where consumers are subject to price changes (because there are no price controls or subsidies) during the oil price spike of 2008 supports this view. So price distortions should lead to inventory accumulation.

This is an excellent illustration of why commodities are a good place to test theories of speculative distortion. The speculators may play their games in the financial markets, but if they affect prices, consumers and producers who don’t play the game alter their behavior. Looking for evidence of behavioral changes–consumption and production changes–is a great way to detect price distortions. That is not possible in asset markets. Consumers and producers are canaries in the coal mine.

Which all means that to persuade, Singleton, and those who are using his paper to say Eureka!, need to provide a plausible explanation of how learning/behavioral finance effects change the behavior of producers and consumers in ways that what would mean that price distortions do not lead to noticeable changes in quantities like inventory. That is, he points to models of asset markets in which there are no consumers; to make a realistic and testable model, you would need to include producers and consumers as well–not just demand for a stock of assets, but flow demand and supply.

One last thing. The Singleton paper has “boom and bust” in the title, and many behavioral finance/learning models predict boom and bust patterns in speculative prices. There was a boom and bust in oil prices and other commodity prices–but the bust in 2008 was not plausibly the kind of speculative bubble bursting that occurs in the models. It was definitely driven by a huge collapse in demand resulting from the financial crisis. Thus the “bust” part of the price movements should not be used as evidence in favor of the theory. Instead, it fits far better a fundamentals-based story. As I told many reporters as prices peaked in summer 2008, when they asked what would bring down prices: be careful what you ask for. A major recession would be the most likely cause of a big price decline. That’s what happened–not the bursting of a speculative bubble.

Relatedly. Prices that positively cannot be driven by asset pricing bubbles–because they are are definitively not assets–boom and bust. During the same period that oil prices were booming and then busting, shipping rates were doing the same thing. Space on a ship is not an asset. It is not storable; you use it or lose it. You can speculate on the price of the ship, but the price of the services of the ship cannot be subject to asset pricing bubbles–because these services are not an asset. The spike and thudding collapse of shipping rates in 2007-early 2009 is indicative of a rise and fall in the demand for commodities (which are transported by ship), and cannot be explained by speculative distortion induced by learning, etc. Put differently, booms and busts occur in markets in which asset price bubbles are impossible.

To summarize. 1. Singleton’s results are perfectly consistent with rational pricing, no speculative distortions, and financial market frictions. 2. The conditions that would reconcile the kind of learning/behavioral finance model that would be necessary to explain the lack of inventory accumulation are highly implausible. If somebody wants to tell a more convincing story about commodity price bubbles, it is necessary to do more than just genuflect to models devised to explain things like the dot-com bubble. You have to create a model that includes flow demand and supply, and derive testable implications of investor/speculator learning or irrationality for quantities produced, consumed, and stored. Only then will it even be remotely possible to determine the real implications of these learning models for commodities.

streetwiseprofessor.com