Tuesday, July 28, 2009

CFTC Helping Green America with $10 Gas

I'm starting to see the brilliant foresight of the master plan of our current Administration's social engineering program. Eroding liquidity in the energy markets that are easily accessible to hedgers (gas pump operators, airlines, utilities, etc.) who actively need big banks & other investors (speculators) to take the other side of their trades will certainly cause gas prices to spike at the pump, make air travel & shipping the luxury it once was, and ensure that the President is the only one who can keep his office tropically warm in the winter.
Since companies won't be able to put floors on the price of gasoline, natural gas and other commodities their costs will be at the mercy of a very volatile supply and demand and they will have to adjust their prices up to ensure they can still make a profit in any given quarter. That is, until they're nationalized because they can't sustain independent operations anymore and are too big to failll into the wrong hands (like those of a successful foreign company that might fire some US union workers).
This policy will at once force people into buying hybrids and increase the cost of imports (which makes Obama's protectionist allies happy). Of course it would be extremely unpopular to achieve these goals through gas taxes and import tariffs. Making this appear to be a crusade against evil market manipulators makes it far easier to achieve the same results with popular support.
Of course with taxes and tariffs at least the government would make some money to pay back the exponentially expanding debt load, but that's the problem of another generation. At least the Earth they'll inherit will be green, that's good since all their money will be going to interest payments they'll have to learn how to live off the land.
clipped from online.wsj.com
CFTC Will Pin '08 Price Surge on Speculators, in a Reversal From Bush Findings.
Under Chairman Gary Gensler, appointed by President Barack Obama, the CFTC is departing from the more hands-off approach it took under its previous head, a George W. Bush appointee. During his confirmation process earlier this year, Mr. Gensler said he believed speculation was partly behind the surge in commodity prices.

In the U.S., the CFTC begins public hearings Tuesday to determine whether to limit speculative investments in commodities. Byron Dorgan, a North Dakota Democrat, has called on the CFTC to curb "oil speculators looking for a quick buck at the expense of American consumers."
[CME Head] Craig Donohue, said: "We are deeply concerned that inappropriate regulation of these markets will cause market participants to move to dark pools and other unregulated markets, causing irrevocable harm to the entire U.S. economy."
Last year, CFTC Chief Economist Jeffrey Harris told a House Agriculture subcommittee: "The economic data shows that overall commodity price levels, including agriculture commodity and energy futures prices, are being driven by powerful fundamental economic forces and the laws of supply and demand." Mr. Harris didn't return a call to comment.

The acting CFTC chairman at the time, Bush-appointee Walter Lukken, told the House Agriculture committee that CFTC's economists "did not find direct evidence that speculation was driving up prices." Mr. Lukken, now an executive at the New York Stock Exchange, declined to comment.
[Crude Measures]
U.K.'s Financial Services Authority has found no evidence that speculators are behind big oil-price swings. The FSA doesn't believe that limiting the size of trading positions would be "beneficial" for the market.

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