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HAZEL
HENDERSON: A CLOSER LOOK AT OIL SPECULATORS:
11/07/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
By
special permission of IPS and not for redistribution.
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 11
July 2008 --
Debate is now raging in policy circles about the role of speculators in sky
high oil prices, now in the $140 per barrel range. Yes, supply is tight and
world demand is rising. In addition, 77% of the world’s proven oil reserves
are now controlled by national governments. Political risks abound in the
Mid-East, Nigeria and elsewhere. Peak oil is approaching and global warming is
bringing a slow end to the Fossil Fuel Age. We are entering the next
industrial stage, the Solar Age, based on renewable “green” technologies,
solar, wind, geothermal and ocean energy.
But the fights
between the incumbent fossil fuel and nuclear sectors and the rising solar and
renewable resource sectors are heating up, as I predicted in my The Politics
of the Solar Age (1981). The US Congress passed House Bill HR. 6377 in June to
limit speculators in oil. Expert witnesses to Congress claim that enforcing
higher margin payments on oil futures and other tighter rules by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) could cut oil prices in half in 30 days.
Mainstream media are hesitant to fully cover this, fearful of repercussions
from this powerful industry and big financial players. Meanwhile, the
International Energy Agency (IEA), a powerful voice for the fossil fuel
industry, insists that speculators are not a problem and that demand will be
reduced by the high prices.
The first thing we
need to know is the difference between speculators and hedgers. Hedging is
buying future contracts for oil to be delivered, hopefully at a lower price.
Hedging is a vital activity performed by participants in the commodity futures
trading markets such as Chicago’s CME, New York’s NYMEX and London-owned,
Atlanta-based ICE (Intercontinental Commodities Exchange). Hedging, for
example, by US-based Southwest Airlines still allows them to continue
operating for another year without facing bankruptcy now plaguing other
airlines. The key in hedging is that hedgers need real oil to operate their
businesses and plan to take delivery of the oil when their futures contract
comes due. Thus, these commodities markets performed a vital function but were
rarely overseen properly in the past 7 years by the CFTC.
Speculating is
buying futures oil contracts, purely betting that oil will rise in price. Huge
sums have poured into this from pension funds, hedge funds, exchange traded
funds (ETFs), as well as university endowments and other large institutional
investment managers, all competing for “alpha,” i.e. higher than average
returns. Such huge flows of money into commodities and their futures markets
have disrupted their normal functioning. They were never intended for the
purposes of such large investment pools just buying futures contracts and then
rolling them over when their delivery dates come due. These speculators are
buying paper or electronic barrels of oil, while hedgers continue buying real
barrels for their legitimate business proposes.
All this was
revealed in the explosive hearings of June 26th ,chaired by Congressman Bart
Stupak, with experts in financial markets including Michael Masters, CEO of
Masters Capital Management; Fadel Gheit, Oppenheimer & Company; Roger
Diwan, Partner, PFC Consultants; Edward Krapel and others. All urged immediate
enforcement by the CFTC of higher margins, up to 50%, full disclosure of
buying by large investment funds, limiting the size of such purchasers and
fuller disclosure. The Bill, HR 6377, which passed in late June, called for
these reforms and stated that speculation in oil futures had risen from 37% of
energy trading in April 2000 to 71% by April 2008. All witnesses agreed that
this “bubble” in oil must be popped as soon as possible because it was
wrecking the price discovery function and normal operations of vital futures
markets. The speculative bets by the big new players with their “long
only” positions had helped push up prices beyond the true supply-demand
price of between $60 to $80 per barrel. Usually, where traders are hedging for
buyers of real oil, there are just as many “short” positions to balance
out the market. One witness said that the oil “bubble” was fast becoming a
“tumor,” metastasizing every day.
In my earlier
editorial for InterPress Service, “Changing Games in the Global Casino,” I
called for similar measures now in the House Bill HR 6377. The damage I cited
to real people and real companies is growing daily, as food prices lead to
hunger and oil prices lead to bankruptcies in trucking, fishing, airlines and
other industries. In the USA, the towns of Gary and Terre Haute, both in
Indiana, have lost all air service due to airlines going bust. Mass transit is
still crumbling and often non-existent for people trying to find other means
than driving to work. Infrastructure, mass transit and energy conservation
have been ignored for decades in the USA in favor of continued subsidies of
some $230 billion per year to oil, gas and nuclear energy, all big political
contributors and sponsors of ad campaigns to deny the realities of global
warming.
The key questions
raised by those defending current policies and speculation are :
• If the CFTC
imposed these new rules to curb speculators, would trading move from the NYMEX
and ICE to other new exchanges with less regulation (the usual threat whenever
such regulating of markets is proposed). The answer from the experts is that
this is an empty threat and that any such new, unregulated markets would be
little more than “casinos in the sky.”
• If oil prices
could be brought down by 50% in 30 days, how would this compare with more
drilling for new oil supplies in the USA off the coasts and in the Arctic
Natural Wildlife Refuge (ANWR)? The answer was no comparison! Exploring and
drilling would take many years, billions of new investment and hardly affect
the world price of oil.
The US Congress
Committee on Natural Resources reported in June 2008 that the USA cannot drill
its way to cheaper oil prices. The oil companies in the past 4 years have
already stockpiled another 10,000 permits to drill on public lands, on top of
the 28,776 permits they have already, only 18,954 of which have been
activated. The US Department of the Interior reported in May 2008 that the US
public “had been deluded into believing that large tracts of oil and gas are
off-limits, whereas only 38% of oil and 16% of gas areas are excluded from
leasing.”
What would be the
risks to markets and economic stability if these reforms were suddenly
enacted? The answers the witnesses gave were that these reforms would be
bullish: for stocks, bonds, the US dollar, all the companies now stressed and
facing bankruptcy, and all the consumers trying to afford higher food and
gasoline prices. The pension funds and other big speculators would have to
unwind their positions quickly, but they represent a small percentage of most
portfolios and their other assets would rise.
Another bigger
question is why anyone thinks that oil companies would want to invest billions
to find new oil supplies, which would only decrease the price of their
product? The business decisions oil companies have been making are what Wall
Street demands: to deliver the most profits to their shareholders, not to
reduce the price of oil. Sitting on the leases they hold without exploring or
drilling them both keeps oil prices high and increases the value of their
leases as “proven reserves” to beef up their balance sheets. And lobbying
Congress for more leases would add more “proven reserves” to their bottom
lines. Thus we see this market logic at work as oil companies continue to bank
their huge profits and use the cash to buy back their own stock.
The public
interest, however, demands the passage of HR 6377. If oil prices tumble as a
result, the retail price of gasoline should stay above $ 4 a gallon (closer to
the real world price of up to $9), even if additional taxes are imposed.
Fifteen percent of the speculation in oil is related to the US dollar’s
decline. So the US needs to kick its addiction to oil – not by demanding
more at lower prices, but by shifting that $230 billion of subsidies to fossil
fuels and nukes to ramp up wind, solar, geothermal and ocean sources. Cars
will soon be run on electricity, as the CEO of Nissan Motors, USA testified at
another hearing chaired by Congressman Edward Markey on Global Warming in
June. Nissan will start delivering all electric cars in 2010. Meanwhile high
oil prices, even at their real levels of $60-$80 per barrel are rapidly
shifting societies toward the Solar Age, where gasoline will not be needed in
cars or other transport. The world’s remaining oil is too valuable to
continue burning in inefficient cars, but can be saved for chemicals, plastics
and other higher-value uses.
Meanwhile, the
public interest also demands that oil companies use their piles of cash to
invest directly in the most cost-effective new energy sources now growing at
double digit rates around the world. These include wind power, solar
photovoltaics sprouting on rooftops in many countries, solar thermal
concentrator power plants now dotting the desert Southwest in the USA, Spain
and other countries. Together with unexploited geothermal and ocean energy,
these Solar Age energy sources are already delivering electricity to homes and
businesses worldwide. And all those pension funds should also be investing in
all these new energy sources to assure the future financial security of their
beneficiaries, rather than playing as short-term speculators. Socially
concerned investors, employees and citizens should hold the managers of their
pension funds to higher standards to foster the transition to the Solar Age.
* * * * * *
Hazel Henderson is author of Ethical
Markets: Growing The Green Economy (2007) and co-creator with the Calvert group
of the Calvert-Henderson-Quality of Life Indicators regularly updated at
www.Calvert-Henderson.com. She can be reached at www.EthicalMarkets.com and her
TV shows are at www.EthicalMarkets.tv.
Labels:
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Hazel
Henderson, InterPress
Service, Oil,
The
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Futures Trading Commission, International
Energy Agency, HR
6377, Bart Stupak
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