Anyone watch CBS 60 Minutes last night?

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60 Minutes: Speculation Affected Oil Price Swings More Than Supply And Demand



(CBS) About the only economic break most Americans have gotten in the last six months has been the drastic drop in the price of oil, which has fallen even more precipitously than it rose. In a year's time, a commodity that was theoretically priced according to supply and demand doubled from $69 a barrel to nearly $150, and then, in a period of just three months, crashed along with the stock market.



So what happened? It's a complicated question, and there are lots of theories. But as correspondent Steve Kroft reports, many people believe it was a speculative bubble, not unlike the one that caused the housing crisis, and that it had more to do with traders and speculators on Wall Street than with oil company executives or sheiks in Saudi Arabia.

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To understand what happened to the price of oil, you first have to understand the way it's traded. For years it has been bought and sold on something called the commodities futures market. At the New York Mercantile Exchange, it's traded alongside cotton and coffee, copper and steel by brokers who buy and sell contracts to deliver those goods at a certain price at some date in the future.



It was created so that farmers could gauge what their unharvested crops would be worth months in advance, so that factories could lock in the best price for raw materials, and airlines could manage their fuel costs. But more than a year ago those markets started to behave erratically. And when oil doubled to more than $147 a barrel, no one was more suspicious than Dan Gilligan.



As the president of the Petroleum Marketers Association, he represents more than 8,000 retail and wholesale suppliers, everyone from home heating oil companies to gas station owners.



When 60 Minutes talked to him last summer, his members were getting blamed for gouging the public, even though their costs had also gone through the roof. He told Kroft the problem was in the commodities markets, which had been invaded by a new breed of investor.

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See link for the rest of the story . . .

 
I did watch the show last night and thought that it shed light on alot of light issues I've never heard of. Especially liked the point of how oil is traded three times amount in volume than is consumed in the U.S. Also liked the man that said that MorganStanly is the biggest oil company in the U.S. Leads me to think that they rung up the prices on purpose, not that I didn't already suspect it, just more proff and reason to do so.

CHRIS
 
Yeah I watched it. I guess folks can stop blaming President Bush for it.



of course, CBS could have fabricated that story like the did in sept 04.
 
In a maner of speaking we can partially blame Pres. Bush because he bailed out Morgan-Stanley and others so that he & his cronies would not loose money in their oil investments. Now that the stock market is making a recovery the oil prices are going back up due to the spetulators.

 
Rodger said:
In a maner of speaking we can partially blame Pres. Bush because he bailed out Morgan-Stanley and others so that he & his cronies would not loose money in their oil investments. Now that the stock market is making a recovery the oil prices are going back up due to the spetulators.



You are kidding, right? That was Bush's motivation for the Wall St bailout? To make sure his oil buddies stayed rich?



TJR



 
In a maner of speaking we can partially blame Pres. Bush because he bailed out Morgan-Stanley and others so that he & his cronies would not loose money in their oil investments.



The only investors to lose money in oil were the boneheads that purchased futures contracts when oil was above $135 or $140 a barrel...
 
Very intresting video. It is a shame that our capitilist system is on the verge of destruction,IMO. All because the new attitude of greed and make a very quick get rich. Instead of the give the people what they want or need at fair price and qaulity over the long term. Im not a socialist, and this is just my opinion. If it doesnt stop, we could very well set ourselves up for it.

There seems to be no pride in how corporate America feeds us anymore.:(
 
It's an illustration of what happens when you take deregulation too far. In the absence of all oversight, and there was no oversight of the oil futures market, people will try to take advantage of the market for their own gain.



The current round of deregulation got started under Carter and picked up steam under Reagan. Clinton was responsible for signing the law that allowed the Enron fiasco to happen, and Bush finished it off.



They are all to blame.
 
Bill,



The stock market is not going up, but it is not taking a major dump either. That to me says that it is attempting to recover, or in the process of making a recovery.



Todd C,



I totally agree with you. "All politicians are to blame". They do not care as long are their pockets are lined. We need to get rid of the lobbyists, but I do not see that happening.



 
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