Oil: S&D My arse! Look At This Market Manipulation!

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Bastards! :mad:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/15/business/worldbusiness/15oil.html?_r=1

HOUSTON — From the Indian Ocean to the South Atlantic to the Gulf of Mexico, giant supertankers brimming with oil are resting at anchor or slowly tracing racetrack patterns through the sea, heading nowhere.

The ships are marking time, serving as floating oil-storage tanks. The companies and countries leasing them for that purpose have made a simple calculation: the price of oil has fallen so far that it is due for a rise.

Some producing countries are trying to force that rise by using the tankers to withhold oil from the market, while traders are trying to profit by buying cheap oil now to store and sell at a higher price later. Oil storage has become so popular that onshore tank capacity is becoming scarce.

Only six months ago, companies up and down the energy pipeline were rushing oil to market, struggling to keep up with galloping demand and soaring prices. Now, with the global economy slumping and people driving less, demand for oil has plunged — and the same companies are acting in ways that would have been unimaginable until recently.

Oil producers are shutting down rigs, refiners are producing less gasoline, and investment planning throughout the industry is in turmoil.

The problem for the companies is not just that prices are lower, but that they have become volatile — historically, a sign of an unstable market whose direction is uncertain. Between Christmas and a week ago oil prices soared 40 percent, only to reverse course almost as sharply in recent days. Just last week, the price of a barrel of crude oil dropped by nearly 12 percent in one day alone.

“The oil markets are suffering acute whiplash,” said Daniel Yergin, an energy consultant and author of “The Prize,” a history of world oil markets. “Price volatility is adding to the sense of shock and confusion and uncertainty.”

The wild price swings are a continuation of last year’s trends, when the price of a barrel of oil swelled to nearly $150 in July from just below $100 in January before collapsing to less than $35 last month. Daily oil prices rose or dropped by 5 percent or more 39 times, versus just four times over the previous two years. The only recent year that was comparably volatile was 1990, the year Iraq invaded Kuwait.

The continuing volatility is sending waves of anxiety up and down the complex production and investment chains of the oil world.

A year ago, oil producers and refiners could not move their products fast enough to meet growing world demand and chase rising prices. Now, with demand and prices slumping, they are sitting on 327 million barrels at tank farms around the country, particularly at Cushing, Okla., a major storage hub and a crossroads for pipelines. That is more than 40 million barrels more in storage than this time last year, and more than 30 million barrels higher than the five-year average.

The mounting buildup has come during the last 100 days or so, as consumption of oil fell behind imports and domestic production.

With storage tanks filling up onshore, private and national oil companies, refiners and trading companies are storing another 80 million barrels aboard 35 supertankers and a handful of smaller tankers, the most in 20 years, according to Frontline Ltd., the world’s largest owner of supertankers.

The different players have different reasons for storing oil, whether onshore or offshore.

National oil companies are hoping to reverse the price slide by holding oil off the market. Iran alone is reportedly using as many as 15 tankers to store crude oil in hopes that higher prices will prop up its economy, which is dependent on oil exports.

Private trading companies like Vitol and Phibro are storing oil in expectation of higher prices. They are taking their cues from markets where traders buy and sell contracts for future delivery of oil, which are signaling higher prices down the road.


Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist at Deutsche Bank, noted that a trading company could buy oil at the spot price of nearly $40 a barrel, store it and sell a contract to deliver it in a year for about $60. “You pay between $6 and $10 a barrel to store it, and you can make $10 a barrel,” he said. “That’s why Cushing is filling up rapidly and people are leasing tankers.”

One small example of how the price uncertainty has affected behavior is the Devon Energy Corporation, an Oklahoma City company that in recent years has excited the energy world with announcements about expensive new investments in Canadian oil sands and deepwater oil exploration projects.
 
This practice could be stopped instantly bu the U.S. making up the shortfall by releasing amounts from the SPR. There just aren't enough tankers to compete with this strategy.

This is a serious problem- we've just now stepped back from the brink- once again- on an oil crisis. Now that we have $1.50 unleaded, we can go back to buying 12mpg SUV's again.

Can you imagine if you were one of those "white knights" and invested billions in alternative energy sources 6 months ago? Like oil sands- or even a new refinery? I'm certain the government wouldn't be sending billions to bail you out. And if crude hits the $20's, will the American people want to send that industry a $700Billion bailout package too?

While I am a firm believer in markets, this issue transcends "let the marketplace take care of it". I hate even thinking about having the government involved in this or any of the other things they've screwed up. Bu as long as markets can be manipulated into massive swings of several hundred percentage points on such a crucial commodity, I don't see any other way.
 
Yeah, but they want $3.50 of that to be taxes.

I'll bet if 200 million Americans stood up and told them "We'd take $2 gas and we'll agree to a 50 cent bump in federal taxes per gallon" our government would figure this out yesterday.
 
Yeah, but they want $3.50 of that to be taxes.

I'll bet if 200 million Americans stood up and told them "We'd take $2 gas and we'll agree to a 50 cent bump in federal taxes per gallon" our government would figure this out yesterday.

:iagree::iagree::iagree:
 
If we don't start drilling here and simultaneously continue to work on better alternatives for our daily non-commercial travels, we will always be held captive by our enemies. Our government apparently likes that position.
 
If we don't start drilling here and simultaneously continue to work on better alternatives for our daily non-commercial travels, we will always be held captive by our enemies. Our government apparently likes that position.

Our "leaders" in the US Congress only care about one thing... Getting re-elected! :mad:

I wish they had term limits! :(
 
Fed is 18.4 cents. In TX the state takes another 20. That's about average as far as states go. Ohio is 26, NY is 31.9 Georgia is 7.5
 
If we don't start drilling here and simultaneously continue to work on better alternatives for our daily non-commercial travels, we will always be held captive by our enemies. Our government apparently likes that position.


Gas is $1.50 a gallon. Almost a third of that is taxes. Nobody is going to drill or do anything else until it's either back to $4 plus and stays there for a long time or the government intercedes. And what would the government do? Force GM to spend tens of billions on revamping its product line?
 
sure wish we had dollar fifty a gallon gas. We have 80 cent a litre gas so about 3.20 CDN per US gallon. We pay approx 34 cents per liter fed tax and provinvial tax PLUS 5% GST tax on top of the after tax total cost per litre.

You guys have it sweet.
 
I would love to see the Chevy Volt "powertrain" in the Cadillac XLR body! :D

2006-Cadillac-XLR-V.jpg
 
Gas is $1.50 a gallon. Almost a third of that is taxes. Nobody is going to drill or do anything else until it's either back to $4 plus and stays there for a long time or the government intercedes. And what would the government do? Force GM to spend tens of billions on revamping its product line?

Dont worry, I saw on the news the other day that the Obamaites were working on a 40 cent a gallon tax increase.
 
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