Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
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the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
The Great Oil Swindle: How Much Did the Fed Really Know?
by Mike Whitney
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 stocksthat
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 todays $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
governments 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 Speculatorsʼ
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.
It's not the most vital issue facing us. That would be the looming eco catastrophes that we ignore on a daily basis. But is is THE one story that would explain just about everything wrong with our political system and thus enable us to free ourselves from the illusion that we might actually be doing one single positive thing to remediate our problems. Whitney's been excellent in the past months charting the abuses of the financial system. he now sits atop the story of the new millennium - the possibility that the "bail outs" to take care of one form of speculation are being used to engage in an even more risky and harmful form of speculation.
Bring it home Mike, lets get the truth and speak it to those with the pretense of power.
Bring it home Mike, lets get the truth and speak it to those with the pretense of power.