The
Commodity
Futures and
Trading
Commission
(CFTC) is
investigating
trading in
oil futures
to determine
whether the
surge in
prices to
record
levels is
the result
of
manipulation
or fraud.
They might
want to take
a look at
wheat, rice
and corn
futures
while
they're at
it. The
whole thing
is a hoax
cooked up by
the
investment
banks and
hedge funds
who are
trying to
dig their
way out of
the trillion
dollar
mortgage-backed
securities (MBS)
mess that
they created
by turning
garbage
loans into
securities.
That scam
blew up in
their face
last August
and left
them
scrounging
for handouts
from the
Federal
Reserve. Now
the billions
of dollars
they're
getting from
the Fed is
being
diverted
into
commodities
which is
destabilizing
the world
economy;
driving gas
prices to
the moon and
triggering
food riots
across the
planet.
For months
we've been
told that
the soaring
price of oil
has been the
result of
Peak Oil,
fighting in
Iraq,
attacks on
oil
facilities
in Nigeria,
labor
problems in
Norway, and
(the
all-time
favorite)growth
in China.
It's all
baloney.
Just like
Goldman
Sachs
prediction
of $200 per
barrel oil
is baloney.
If oil is
about to
skyrocket
then why has
G-Sax kept a
neutral
rating on
some of its
oil holdings
like Exxon
Mobile?
Could it be
that they
know that
oil is just
another
mega-inflated
equity
bubble---like
housing,
corporate
bonds and
dot.com
stocks-that
is about to
crash to
earth as
soon as the
big players
grab a
parachute?
There are
three things
that are
driving up
the price of
oil: the
falling
dollar,
speculation
and buying
on margin.
The dollar
is tanking
because of
the Federal
Reserve's
low interest
monetary
policies
have kept
interest
rates below
the rate of
inflation
for most of
the last
decade. Add
that to the
$700 billion
current
account
deficit and
a National
Debt that
has
increased
from $5.8
trillion
when Bush
first took
office to
over $9
trillion
today and
it's a
wonder the
dollar
hasn't gone
"Poof"
already.
According to
a January 4
editorial in
the Wall
Street
Journal: "If
the dollar
had remained
'as good as
gold' since
2001, oil
today would
be selling
at about $30
per barrel,
not $99.
(today $126
per barrel)
The decline
of the
dollar
against gold
and oil
suggests a
US monetary
that is
supplying
too many
dollars."
Wall Street
Journal
1-4-08
The price of
oil has more
than
quadrupled
since 2001,
from roughly
$30 per
barrel to
$126,
WITHOUT ANY
DISRUPTIONS
TO SUPPLY.
There's no
shortage;
it's just
gibberish.
As far as
"buying on
margin"
consider
this summary
from author
William
Engdahl:
"A
conservative
calculation
is that at
least 60% of
today's $128
per barrel
price of
crude oil
comes from
unregulated
futures
speculation
by hedge
funds, banks
and
financial
groups using
the London
ICE Futures
and New York
NYMEX
futures
exchanges
and
uncontrolled
inter-bank
or
Over-The-Counter
trading to
avoid
scrutiny. US
margin rules
of the
government's
Commodity
Futures
Trading
Commission
allow
speculators
to buy a
crude oil
futures
contract on
the Nymex,
by having to
pay only 6%
of the value
of the
contract. At
today's
price of
$128 per
barrel, that
means a
futures
trader only
has to put
up about $8
for every
barrel. He
borrows the
other $120.
This extreme
"leverage"
of 16 to 1
helps drive
prices to
wildly
unrealistic
levels and
offset bank
losses in
sub-prime
and other
disasters at
the expense
of the
overall
population."
So the
investment
banks and
their
trading
partners at
the hedge
funds can
game the
system for a
mere 8 bucks
per barrel
or 16 to 1
leverage.
Not bad, eh?
Is it
possible
that
gambling on
oil futures
might be a
temptation
for banks
that are
already
underwater
from a
trillion
dollars
worth of
mortgage-related
deals that
have "gone
south"
leaving the
banking
system
essentially
bankrupt?
And if the
banks and
hedgies are
not playing
this game,
then where
is the money
coming from?
I have
compiled
charts and
graphs that
show that
nearly
two-thirds
of the big
investment
banks'
revenue came
from the
securitization
of
commercial
and
residential
real estate
loans. That
market is
frozen.
Besides,
this is not
just a
matter of
"loan
delinquencies"
or MBS that
have to be
written off.
The banks
are "revenue
starved".
How are they
filling the
coffers?
They're
either
neck-deep in
interest
rate swaps,
derivatives
trading, or
gaming the
futures
market.
Which is it?
Of course,
there is one
other
possibility,
but if that
possibility
turned out
to be right
than it
would cast
doubt on the
legitimacy
of the
entire
financial
system. In
fact, it
would prove
that the
system is
being rigged
from the
top-down by
our friends
at the
Banking
Politburo,
the Federal
Reserve.
Here goes:
What if the
investment
banks are
trading
their
worthless
MBS and CDOs
at the Fed's
auction
facilities
and using
the money
($400
billion) to
drive up the
price of raw
materials
like rice,
corn, wheat,
and oil?
Could it be?
Could the
Fed really
be looking
the other
way so it
can bail out
its banking
buddies
while they
drive prices
skyward?
If it is
true; (and I
suspect it
is) it
hasn't done
much good.
As the
Associated
Press
reported
yesterday:
"The
Federal
Reserve
announced
Thursday
that it will
make a fresh
batch of
short-term
cash loans
available to
squeezed
banks as
part of an
ongoing
effort to
ease
stressed
credit
markets. The
Fed said it
will conduct
three
auctions in
June, with
each one
making $75
billion
available in
short-term
cash loans.
Banks can
bid for a
slice of the
available
funds. It
would mark
the latest
round in a
program that
the Fed
launched in
December to
help banks
overcome
credit
problems so
they will
keep lending
to
customers."
Another $225
billion for
the bankers
and not a
dime for the
struggling
homeowner!
The Fed is
bankrupting
the country
with their
permanent
rotating
loans to
keep
reckless
speculators
from going
under. So
much for
moral
hazard.
As far as
speculation,
there is
ample
evidence
that the
system is
being
manipulated.
According to
MarketWatch:
"Speculative
activity in
commodity
markets has
grown
"enormously"
over the
past several
years, the
Homeland
Security and
Governmental
Affairs
Committee
said in a
news
release. It
pointed out
that in five
years, from
2003 to
2008,
investment
in the index
funds tied
to
commodities
has grown by
20-fold --
to $260
billion from
$13
billion."
And here's a
revealing
clip from
the
testimony of
Michael W.
Masters of
Masters
Capital
Management,
LLC, who
addressed
the issue of
"Commodities
Speculation"
before the
Committee on
Homeland
Security and
Governmental
Affairs this
week:
"Today,
Index
Speculators
are pouring
billions of
dollars into
the
commodities
futures
markets,
speculating
that
commodity
prices will
increase.
...In the
popular
press the
explanation
given most
often for
rising oil
prices is
the
increased
demand for
oil from
China.
According to
the DOE,
annual
Chinese
demand for
petroleum
has
increased
over the
last five
years from
1.88 billion
barrels to
2.8 billion
barrels, an
increase of
920 million
barrels.8
Over the
same
five-year
period,
Index
Speculators'
demand for
petroleum
futures has
increased by
848 million
barrels. THE
INCREASE IN
DEMAND FROM
INDEX
SPECULATORS
IS ALMOST
EQUAL TO THE
INCREASE IN
DEMAND FROM
CHINA.
Index
Speculators
have now
stockpiled,
via the
futures
market, the
equivalent
of 1.1
billion
barrels of
petroleum,
effectively
adding eight
times as
much oil to
their own
stockpile as
the United
States has
added to the
Strategic
Petroleum
Reserve over
the last
five years.
Today, in
many
commodities
futures
markets,
they are the
single
largest
force.15 The
huge growth
in their
demand has
gone
virtually
undetected
by
classically-trained
economists
who almost
never
analyze
demand in
futures
markets.
As money
pours into
the markets,
two things
happen
concurrently:
the markets
expand and
prices rise.
One
particularly
troubling
aspect of
Index
Speculator
demand is
that it
actually
increases
the more
prices
increase.
This
explains the
accelerating
rate at
which
commodity
futures
prices (and
actual
commodity
prices) are
increasing.
The CFTC has
taken
deliberate
steps to
allow
CERTAIN
SPECULATORS
VIRTUALLY
UNLIMITED
ACCESS TO
THE
COMMODITIES
FUTURES
MARKETS. The
CFTC has
granted Wall
Street banks
an exemption
from
speculative
position
limits when
these banks
hedge
over-the-counter
swaps
transactions.
This has
effectively
opened a
loophole for
unlimited
speculation.
When Index
Speculators
enter into
commodity
index swaps,
which 85-90%
of them do,
they face no
speculative
position
limits....
The result
is a gross
distortion
in data that
effectively
hides the
full impact
of Index
Speculation."
(Thanks to
Mish's
Global
Economic
Trend
Analysis;
the one
"indispensable"
financial
blog on the
Internet)
Masters adds
that the
CFTC is
pressing to
make "Index
Speculators
exempt from
all position
limits" so
they can
make
"unlimited"
bets on the
futures
which are
wreaking
havoc on the
global
economy and
pushing
millions
towards
starvation.
Of course,
these things
pale in
comparison
to the
higher
priority of
fatting the
bottom line
of the
parasitic
investor
class.
Brimming oil
tankers are
presently
sitting off
the coasts
of Iran and
Louisiana.
The
Strategic
Petroleum
Reserve has
been filled.
Demand is
flat. The
world's
biggest
consumer of
energy
(guess who?)
is cutting
back . As
CNN reports:
"At a
time when
gas prices
are at an
all-time
high,
Americans
have
curtailed
their
driving at a
historic
rate. The
Department
of
Transportation
said figures
from March
show the
steepest
decrease in
driving ever
recorded.
Compared
with March a
year
earlier,
Americans
drove an
estimated
4.3 percent
less --
that's 11
billion
fewer miles,
the DOT's
Federal
Highway
Administration
said Monday,
calling it
"the
sharpest
yearly drop
for any
month in
FHWA
history."
(CNN)
The great
oil crunch
is another
fabricated
crisis;
another
"smoke and
mirrors"
fiasco;
another
Enron-type
shell-game
engineered
by banksters
and hedge
fund
managers.
Once again,
the bloody
footprints
can be
traced right
back to the
front door
of the
Federal
Reserve.
Don't expect
help from
the
regulators
either;
they've all
been
replaced
with
business
reps like
Harvey Pitt
or Hank
Paulson. The
only time
anyone in
the Bush
administration
finds their
conscience
is when
they're
offered a
multi-million
dollar "tell
all" book
deal.
Can you hear
me, Scotty?