Should Congress investigate why oil is nearing $70 in a recession?


Friday, June 12 2009 - DailyFinance.com



Is it time for the U.S. Congress to systematically investigate the oil futures 
market? 


Market absolutists cry no, but an oil price pushing $70 per barrel amid the 
worst U.S. recession since 1982, the 

first global recession since World War II, and 10-year-high inventory levels 
argue otherwise. 

After hitting a record high of $147.27 per barrel during the leverage-fed 
investment and trading frenzy of 2008, 

the price of oil collapsed with the onset of the U.S. recession and then the 
implosion of the financial crisis, the 

latter of which took numerous hedge fund and investment fund oil futures buyers 
out of the market. Prices plummeted 

to a low around $35 in December 2008.

Historically, $30 is a high price for oil

Further, it's significant to note that although crude's price collapsed, $35 is 
still, in historical terms, a 

strong price for oil, which has averaged $25-30 per barrel, in current dollars, 
over the past 150 years. 

Moreover, many experts expected oil's price to recover only slowly in 2009. 
U.S. gasoline demand declined for much 

of the past 12 months, on a weekly basis. Emerging market demand growth -- a 
major factor in oil's price rise 

during 2003-2007 -- was low, and the world was set to record its second 
consecutive decline in global oil demand. 

But the incremental rise in oil's price did not occur: instead, the price of 
oil skyrocketed in the past six weeks, 

essentially doubling in a very short period of time, in macroeconomic terms. 

Oil bulls say the oil futures market, like the stock market, is merely pricing 
in likely oil demand conditions six 

to nine months out: investors and traders sense a bottoming recession in the 
U.S. and better economic conditions 

internationally, and its implied rising global oil demand, and are pushing up 
oil's price accordingly. Under this 

thesis, a $70 (or higher) price is justified given likely, future economic 
conditions. 

However, oil industry analysts, among others, are increasingly citing 
investment funds as the primary reason for 

the rise.

"It's the funds that are pushing the market higher," Jonathan Kornafel, 
director for Asia at options trader Hudson 

Capital Energy in Singapore, told Bloomberg News Friday. "When everyone reads 
the same report and comes to the same 

conclusion, then you're going to have the market moving in one direction. The 
general trend is for the dollar to 

get weaker and for crude to get stronger."

Or, in other words, some, if not many institutional investors are buying oil 
futures as an alternative asset – a 

perfectly normal deployment of capital in free markets, and one that's largely 
innocuous (except for the speculator 

or the hedger) if you're investing in oat futures or cotton, so says economist 
Peter Dawson. However, if the asset 

is the world's most important commodity - one on which the developed world's, 
and now much of the developing 

world's - economy hinges, depending on its price – the deployment of capital 
could become a concern, particularly 

if it is concentrated, Dawson told DailyFinance. At least in theory, a 
sector-wide concentration of institutional 

investors could 'artificially boost' the price of a commodity well above what 
supply and demand would typically 

dictate – in effect grossly distorting its price.

"No conspiracy or collusion need occur. Just concentration," Dawson said. 
"Concentration is enough to cause a price 

bubble, and the U.S. housing sector is an example of that. There was no 
'conspiracy' to cause U.S. median home 

prices to rise to dizzying heights, but rise they did, and a bubble formed, due 
to the concentration of players, in 

housing's case, a lot of buyers due to the availability of subprime loans." 

Tail wagging the dog?

Dawson said he wants price discovery to continue in markets, particularly in 
oil, "but what could be occurring now 

is not price discovery, but 'pack mentality.' " The U.S. Congress, Dawson said, 
should begin a formal, long-term 

study on the relationship between the rise in futures trading and oil's price, 
"and systematically research whether 

the ten of thousands of new oil futures players have led to higher prices than 
they would have been, under similar 

supply/demand conditions, with these players absent."

The oil market today - if prices don't moderate in the coming months - also "is 
capable of exhibiting 

characteristics that border on 'The Twilight Zone,' " Dawson added. 

"The problem with the futures activity is that it's pushed prices up so high 
that, if a $60-70 price holds, it will 

further dampen consumer spending and crimp corporate budgets to the point that 
the economic recovery will be hurt," 

Dawson said. "And if that's the case, the futures activity will have the affect 
of eliminating the very economic 

recovery that prompted the oil futures buying in the first place. And when you 
think about it, that type of market 

behavior is just absurd and irrational, from an economic development 
standpoint." 


http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/06/07/should-congress-investigate-why-oil-is-nearing-70-in-a-recessio/






      

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