Is Wall Street Driving Up Gas Prices?

by leavingwt 27 Replies latest social current

  • leavingwt
    leavingwt

    We're paying almost $2.70 per gallon, here in Mississippi. (Our prices are usually among the lowest in the country.)

    What's driving up oil prices again? Wall Street, of course

    By KEVIN G. HALL
    McClatchy Newspapers

    Oil consumption has fallen, demand from U.S. motorists for gasoline is flat at best, and refiners that turn crude into fuel are operating well below capacity. Yet oil prices keep marching toward $90 a barrel, pushing gasoline toward $3 a gallon in many markets, and prompting American drivers to ask, "What gives?"

    Blame it on the same folks who brought you $140 oil and $4 gasoline in 2008: Wall Street speculators.

    Experts attribute much of the recent rise in prices to flows of speculative money into oil markets. These bets are fueled by investor expectations that the U.S. and global economies are poised to return to growth and thus spark increased use of oil. Strong growth in China supports the narrative of rising oil consumption and tightening supplies.

    "The thinking goes that rising stock (market) prices implies expanding business activity, implies growing energy demand, implies rising oil prices. I think you can make that case, but it's awfully weak," said Michael Fitzpatrick, vice president-energy for MF Global, a financial firm that brokers the sale of contracts for future delivery of oil.

    While there are signs of U.S. economic recovery, such as a slight uptick in consumption and strong manufacturing data, there are plenty of ho-hum signs too, including dismal construction spending and continued high unemployment.

    "I just don't think if you look across the entire spectrum of the macro-economy that it creates a picture of a growing body of incontrovertible evidence that there is a strong, sustainable recovery. I just don't see it," Fitzpatrick said. "I think it should be closer to the range we were seeing in late summer and early fall, $67 to $72" a barrel.

    On the last day of July, oil traded at $67.50 a barrel and gasoline sold at a nationwide average of $2.52 a gallon for regular unleaded. On Thursday, oil prices settled at $84.87 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and regular unleaded gasoline averaged $2.80 a gallon and more than $3 on the West Coast, according to the AAA.

    "It's the story we've been talking about. ... It's really about oil being an attractive investment for investors right now," said AAA spokesman Troy Green. "You've seen quite a bit of money flooding into the oil markets because of that."

    What's different about today's price run-up from two or three years ago is that oil is now in ample supply.

    "If you look at the fundamentals right now, there is certainly an abundance that is available (of oil) to the market for the next 12 months or so. It's not a near-term supply shortfall," said David Dismukes, the associate director of the Center for Energy Studies at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.

    U.S. motorists and businesses consumed 18.69 million barrels per day (bpd) of petroleum product last year. That's projected to rise slightly this year to 18.89 million bpd. However, it remains far below peak consumption of 20.80 million bpd in 2005.

    The latest data from the Energy Information Administration, the statistical arm of the Energy Department, shows that as of mid-March, U.S. refiners were operating at 81.1 percent capacity. They're making 8 gallons of gasoline for every 10 they're capable of producing, a clear sign that demand is down.

    Perhaps the only argument that would justify rising prices is that global consumption is expected to grow by 1.6 million bpd to 86.6 million bpd this year, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency.

    Even so, there's 6 million bpd of oil that's shut-in, a technical way of saying that recoverable oil is being left in the ground by the world's oil producers.

    "When you look at inventories and shut-in capacity, (oil) prices today are above what those would indicate," said Daniel Yergin, the author of "The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money & Power," the recently updated Pulitzer Prize-winning book that chronicles the history of oil.

    When oil traded above $140 a barrel nearly two years ago and pundits warned that the world was running out of oil, Yergin suggested that a glut of oil would come onto the market in 2010 and beyond. The 6 million bpd of oil now on the sidelines suggests that he was right.

    Today's spare production capacity is three times what it was in 2004 and 2005, when supply actually was tight.

    The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries signaled last week its concerns about rising prices by not calling for hard enforcement of production quotas by its members. That suggested the cartel will tolerate an open-spigot policy by its 12 members as needed to stabilize prices.

    "While OPEC was silent on any threat to the recovery, speculation continues that the cartel is deliberately allowing members to exceed production quotas in order to limit upward price pressure," wrote analyst Matt Robinson, in a research report Thursday by forecaster Moody's Economy.com.

    Rising oil and gasoline prices are deja vu all over again for Michael Masters. The hedge fund manager has crusaded for legislation that would prevent so much speculative money in the oil markets.

    Wall Street is "gaming" the price of oil, he warns.

    "If you're a bank, and you know there is going to be a large amount of investor inflows into the commodities market, you are going to position yourself ahead of them. ... You want to be a seller at a higher price," explained Masters, noting that large Wall Street banks invest for themselves in these markets even as they also broker the oil investments of others.

    What's abundantly clear, he and others argue, is that an oil contract's price today has little to do with the supply of and demand for oil.

    "It's a capital asset now. Once the majority of participants are capital-asset folks, common sense would tell you it's going to be traded like a capital asset ... and consumers pay," Masters said. "It wasn't that way in the past."

    What can be done?

    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission is weighing a proposal to put global limits on how many oil contracts any one market player can buy or sell, and legislation to revamp financial regulation that's expected to pass Congress this year could force greater disclosure by oil traders to regulators.

    Neither, however, promises imminent relief at the pump.

    http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/04/04/1562726/whats-driving-up-oil-prices-again.html

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips

    #1 The United States isn't the world's only consumer of oil. Our consumption may have fallen, but other parts of the world are growing.

    #2 Oil is considered a valuable hedge against inflation. In a world where the reserve currency's central bank is inflating to stratospheric heights along with a government funding massive new mandates through unprecedented levels of deficit spending, capital will naturally tend to seek a home that protects it against devaluation. Oil and gold fit the bill for many. Water seeks its own level. So does capital.

    As soon as this economy hints at emerging from a recession, the oil spike smackdown will hit.

    BTS

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    The Oil markets should be closed to anyone who doesn't have a material business interest in the use or commerce of oil (as in actual oil, not "oil futures stock market positions").

  • BurnTheShips
    BurnTheShips
    The Oil markets should be closed to anyone who doesn't have a material business interest in the use or commerce of oil (as in actual oil, not "oil futures stock market positions").

    And I should shit rainbow skittles and ride unicorns.

    BTS

  • Sam Whiskey
    Sam Whiskey

    I agree with Burn, Oil is the new "Gold Standard". What happens with Oil (as Gold used to) happens in our economy. It no longer matters how much we have or don't have in reserves, it matters what the traders think about future supply and demand. And remember, these are all futures contracts. Contracts on Oil to be delivered 3 months to 24 months down the road....so to speak.

  • beksbks
    beksbks
    And I should shit rainbow skittles and ride unicorns.
    BTS

    Yea, you should. It would be an improvement.

  • PrimateDave
    PrimateDave

    Yes, market speculation and the printing presses at the Fed. Also, the world is on the "bumpy plateau" of peak petroleum production which started in 2005.

    "So far, the record year for world crude production was 2005, and the record month was July 2008. Tellingly, the leveling-off of extraction rates between 2005 and 2008 occurred in the context of rising oil prices; indeed, in July 2008, the price spiked 50% higher than the previous inflation-adjusted record, set in the 1970s. Yet as both oil demand and prices rose, production barely budged in response. ...

    "The argument that oil production could theoretically continue to grow past 2015 is mainly put forward by organizations such as Cambridge Energy Research Associates and Saudi Aramco, which explain away evidence of dwindling discoveries, depleting oilfields and stagnating total production by claiming that it is demand for oil that has peaked, not supply — a claim that hinges on the observation that oil prices are high enough to discourage potential buyers. But high prices for a commodity usually signify scarcity, so the "peak demand" argument doesn’t hold water." - Richard Heinberg, Economic History in 10 Minutes

  • Sam Whiskey
    Sam Whiskey

    "The Oil markets should be closed to anyone who doesn't have a material business interest in the use or commerce of oil (as in actual oil, not "oil futures stock market positions")."

    If you close off the free market system of trading Oil, what's next? The stock market? You don't have a material interest in each company you invest in, so you can't trade. The Bond market? The Currencies market?

    If you shut down Capitalism, you shut down country. If you shut down Capitalism you shut down the very foundation that America was founded on.

    If you shut down Capitalism, you end up like the old USSR....except the USA would be called USSA. The United Soviet Socialists of America.

  • Sam Whiskey
    Sam Whiskey

    Oh, and I forgot to mention, people (investors / traders) were shorting the market when Oil was dropping from $140.00. So they made money when Oil was dropping too. Now "Naked" short selling,....that's a whole different topic, and it's not what obviously comes to mind. People were making a killing with that on the Banking fiasco.

  • beksbks
    beksbks

    Sam, don't you get that there are some things in this country that should be part of the "commons"? There used to be a central square where everyone could graze their stock, because it was assumed that this country belongs to we the PEOPLE. Utilities are partially regulated as such, because rather than grazing land now, we all need energy and water. The same with food. Food, energy, housing, should not be up for grabs by the highest/richest bidder. Take a look at Tom Paines ideas for land ownership if you dare.

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