Emac's Stock Watch | Fox Business
  • July 7, 2008 11:45 AM EDT by Elizabeth MacDonald

    Part Four: The Regulators Blowtorch Oil Speculators

    With gas prices possibly careening toward $7 a gallon, with plans afoot to have cars drive and airplanes fly on hooch, with the Central Bank of Oil, Saudi Arabia, pumping more sour than sweet crude (striking fear that it really may be running out), oil speculators are in the bulls' eye in this tumultuous political season, when the haymaker of inflation has chopped through family budgets, when the subprime crisis has gone viral around the world, a credit crunch sans frontieres.

    Congress is now igniting a stink bomb under the oil markets, leaving me to wonder when the European Union is going to file an antitrust action against OPEC instead of hectoring Microsoft into a nervous breakdown, which likely won't happen as Europe needs the energy tank that is OPEC (and Iran's nuclear energy too?) given that a quarter of its oil and gas comes from an increasingly erratic and undependable Russia.

    But all this is for another day. On top of the agenda is the move by lawmakers to shut the London loophole which allows oil trades offshore, a loophole born out of the criminal enterprise that was Enron.

    About a dozen pieces of legislation of different stripes and colors are before Congress, all built on the foundation that speculators have caused oil prices to soar, as oil prices have soared higher since last summer, just about when the Federal Reserve started to open a gusher of liquidity in the form of interest rate cuts and term liquidity auctions to repair a damaged Wall Street, causing the dollar to drop in value.

    Oil traders are in the crosshairs, and it's certainly true that the free market has turned into a free for all here. Oil speculators are to blame--but no one under this sun in this galaxy in this place and time can offer proof positive just how much in dollars and cents they have caused oil prices to spike.

    One plank in the oil speculator argument is the idea that commodities index funds have exploded in value, according to Barclays Capital, an investment bank, to $225 bn in the first quarter, though that blithely ignores the fact that these commodity assets under management include trades in metals and agricultural investments, too.

    Barclays said assets climbed by $28 bn in the first quarter, almost three times the gain in the same year-earlier period. How much that $28 bn translates into what dollar price of the now $144 a barrel is anyone's best guess in a world that sees trillions of dollars in commodities traded daily.

    And Barclays Capital, an investment bank, says that the rise in commodity index funds, the very same funds which have agitated Congress because they remain bullish on oil and ipso facto have caused oil prices to rise, in the first quarter grew by just $13bn from the prior period.

    Only $2 bn represented net inflows, Barclays says, with the rest, $11 bn representing the effect of higher prices, meaning, appreciation, meaning, a weak dollar.

    Speculation in oil, Barclays says, has been flat lining and speculative money is moving toward the short side. On that score, the latest count of crude futures shows 216.4 mn barrels in long positions and 188.1 mn in short positions.

    In other words, Barclays Capital calculates that index funds amounted to just 12% of the outstanding contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), with a value equal to a teensy 2% of the world's yearly oil consumption.

    Go figure. Never mind that no physical barrel of oil is sold or removed on these markets, that instead these are paper barrels, these are essentially bets on the direction of oil prices, with deals settled in cash not physical barrels of oil. Oil traders make bets on expectations of supply and demand.

    The logic here is that if oil traders really do jack up oil prices to ridiculous levels, then consumers would flee, demand would plummet, and oil fields would sit abandoned. You think that's really happening?

    However, two professors from Hofstra University say that while short-term contract supply problems can whipsaw oil prices, but when it comes to long-term futures contracts that last longer than a year, now get this, "there is empirical evidence of hoarding in the crude oil market: both oil stocks/inventories and futures prices are found to be positively cointegrated/correlated with each other."

    Message here: Both hoarding and long term bets can potentially hurt oil prices down the road. Think of China's Beijing Olympics, given that the country is scrambling to stop pollution, so it's dumping coal for now, and also the fact that it wants to save face and not have any embarrassing oil shortages whatsoever as the world comes crowding in to the Middle Kingdom this summer.

    So, speculators are behind some unknown amount of oil price increases. The real pivot of this affair is stopping some whacked out greedy trader from whipsawing the market. Huge commodities bets have jerked the market around in the past--think Enron and the hedge fund Amaranth Advisors flame-outs. The fear is legitimate that these bets could wreck it for consumers, but you don't hear that nuance out of Congress.

    Back to the regulatory problem on oil trading, which is really an oversight problem that has bedeviled the markets for decades.

    Here's the issue. Credit swaps in oil, swaps that are not traded on regulated exchanges, usually are made by huge institutional investors like pension funds and hedge funds. They are now estimated to be at $260 bn, up from less than $6 billion ten years ago. These trades sit outside the regulatory radar. A Congressional committee that is looking into these trades released data back in June that says only 15% of index investing is transacted on regulated futures exchanges, with the rest off line, out of sight of the regulators.

    However, the Enron loophole did not first create the problem of unregulated paper barrels of oil. According to a recent Congressional committee hearing on oil speculation, the CFTC authorized its first exemption from position limits for swap dealers with no physical commodity exposure way back in 1991. The move let investment banks start to build massive trades in commodity markets. Paper oil barrels have in turn been in the market for about 17 years.

    Bureaucratic apathy then got a high level blessing back in 1993, when Wendy Gramm, then head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and wife to former Sen. Phil Gramm, ushered in a rule change that let these swaps avoid CFTC regulation.

    Enron then built an electronic platform for trading energy futures, called Enron Online, in the late ‘90s.

    Then the Enron loophole was enacted when the Commodity Futures Modernization Act passed in 2000 after lobbying by the infamous Houston energy company. The legislation exempted electronic energy exchanges from much federal regulatory oversight and exempted these swaps from regulation.

    The legislative change essentially let large firms trade energy commodities on over-the-counter electronic exchanges exempted from the CFTC. The Enron loophole was engineered by then-Sen. Gramm (R., Tex.), among others Congressmen.

    With the legislative change in 2000, paid for with lobbying dollars by Enron, the majority of energy trading drifted from the regulated NYMEX to the more loosely regulated London's InterContinentalExchange (ICE), the over-the-counter energy-trading venue which also runs the ICE Futures Europe platform.

    Then in 1999, the London exchange obtained the CFTC's permission to install computer terminals in the United States to let traders in New York and other US cities trade European energy commodities through the ICE exchange. Previously, the ICE Futures exchange in London had traded only in European energy commodities.

    Flash forward to January 2006. The Bush administration's CFTC then let the ICE use its trading terminals in the United States to trade US crude oil futures on the ICE futures exchange in London, according to a recent report.

    So that's how the Enron loophole morphed into the London Loophole, now to blame for the runaway freight train packed with oil speculators that is mowing down consumers and companies alike.

    Here's the problem as it stands today.

    NYMEX traders must keep records of all trades and report large trades to the CFTC, along with daily trading data noting price and volume information. The CFTC uses that data to track speculation and price manipulation, reports indicate.

    But traders on unregulated OTC electronic exchanges don't have to keep records or file these "Large Trader Reports" with the CFTC, and these trades are exempt from routine CFTC oversight, reports indicate.

    Also, there is no limit on the number of contracts a speculator may hold on an unregulated OTC electronic exchange, no monitoring of trading by the exchange itself, and no reporting of the amount of outstanding contracts ("open interest") at the end of each day, reports note.

    Under current law, US traders can execute mirror transactions in what are called look-alike contracts in crude oil contracts on both the NYMEX and on London's ICE. Futures look-alike contracts are traded in loosely regulated markets, while oil futures contracts are traded on regulated exchanges.

    The problem is, US regulators have an eye only on what goes on in New York. CFTC regulators don't have a complete picture of trading activity in order to ensure manipulation is not occurring. The reason is, US law restricts regulation of "foreign boards of trade by domestic regulatory bodies," notes Bart Chilton, a CFTC commissioner, adding the proposed US legislation would close this gap.

    Traders can arbitrage between the two markets, and the CFTC in effect regulates only half of the trading, Chilton says. ICE is not required to be self-regulated, as the NYMEX is, and it is not regulated by the CFTC. Instead, the ICE is regulated by the United Kingdom's regulator, the Financial Services Authority in London, which, for instance, does not establish position limits, as the CFTC does.

    While critics say this arbitrage has caused a record rise in oil and gas prices, leaving parts of the market vulnerable to manipulation and excessive speculation, the debate now is based on, well, speculation, because no one really knows.

    However, fresh new legislation and the CFTC's crackdown are "intended to close a significant regulatory lacuna in the CFTC's commodities market surveillance system," explains Chilton.

    The new legislation will require electronic energy traders to provide an audit trail and record-keeping of their trades, provide a [hallway] monitor for market manipulation, significantly increase financial penalties for cases of market manipulation and excessive speculation, require the CFTC to get big hedge funds and other "large traders" to report their biggest positions to it, plus force traders exceeding position limits on the market to cut their holdings.

    Proposals are flying around too that would force higher margins in commodity trades, and would dramatically increase the collateral required to make a trade.

    The thinking is, if federal regulators could have seen Enron's corrupt electricity trading, and the hedge fund Amaranth Advisors' equally corrupt gas trades in 2005, bureaucrats could have stopped Enron's gouging of consumers in California with trades that artificially whipsawed electricity costs higher and caused rolling blackouts in the state.

    And grey office beavers could have stopped Amaranth from gouging consumers in Georgia with bets that caused higher gas prices in this state. This doomed hedge fund moved contracts to London to pile up excessive natural gas positions, bets which ultimately went south and caused the firm to flop, the largest hedge fund failure at the time with $6 bn in investor losses

    Yes and government bureaucrats can stop solar flares and Mars from wobbling to help prevent global warming, and El Nino is caused by the First Lady's smoking. Didn't you know that?

    More regulation is needed to stop greedy oil speculators, but we can only hold hands and pray that a well-meaning bureaucrat can stop speculators from cornering a market.

    This boils down to the issue of transparency in oil trades, a weak dollar, and supply and demand.

    Oil trades have picked up speed due to a plummeting dollar. Notably pension funds have piled in, as they are required to protect their pensioners against price increases by seeking high returns that beat inflation, so they've migrated away from depreciating bonds and into the oil market.

    As the Federal Reserve cut interest rates, the treasury bonds that are usually the preferred investment vehicle of choice for pension funds and endowments no longer could keep pace with inflation so they plowed into oil.

    Will new regulation have an impact? Stay tuned.

Tampa John

We have our pros and our cons in life. And in the US it seems that our Congress which impedes Progress. Thus their work lives true to their name.

July 9, 2008 at 8:03 am

FM

Oil should never be a commodity open to speculation, period. Speculate on any other commodity but not oil. The reason is obvious as oil currently drives everything financially. I get sick to my stomach when I see JP Morgan and other investment groups issuing statements on "how high oil could go" or "that it won't go below x a barrel" simply to try and keep spinning this oil speculation market that is already so fragile. Anyone who is not convinced that this is an issue that has primarily been caused from greed based speculation only need to look at the drastic daily swings in price per barrel. Those +-$5 SESSIONS show CLEAR evidence the way this market is currently pushing prices around based on what *might* happen with each new day. My hope is that the bubble bursts quick and so hard that the speculators that have helped double the price of oil in a year lose, lose, lose.

July 8, 2008 at 4:09 pm

Karnak ..

Justin......... I said nothing about "obscene" profits.. You are sounding like Pelosi. Big Oil is making record profits and I congratulate them for it.. However, oil is an integral item to the health of our citizens and the security of our country. Therefore, Congress and Big Oil both are guilty of taking advantage of a situation where there are too few legitimate competitors in the marketplace.. You are correct in saying that Congress should be villified for their lax attitude toward oil producers and their do-nothing policy about drilling; especially when alternatives are not on the horizon yet.. The lack of a gold standard for the dollar is a major contributing factor to its fluctuations.. I see no Congressman making any move to correct the dollar's woes.. ---- Big Oil will continue to charge as much as possible, and Congress will continue to do nothing of any consequence as long as the oil lobbyists continue the flow of money.. They both are enjoying a spectacular ride right now with no consequences to pay (YET)...

July 8, 2008 at 3:18 pm

Rod

Justin Did it ever occur to you that "profit margin" is just accounting, and can be manipulated as a company needs, ever hear of cooking the books? Increased expesnes in any category decreases the profit margin. Give the CEO and other execs a big bonus or raise that decreases the profit margin. Let your Nigerian platform get blown up that loss decreases your profit margin. Are we getting gouged? Yes, by the oil companies, the oil cartel, the local gas station, the speculator and our elected officals. Are we seeing record demand? No. New car sales are in the dirt. Trying to convince me India has a record number of scooters on the road? Please. China is suddenly booming and the rural masses are suddenly living the first world lifestyle? Not even. Similar arguements can be made for all petro products, eg the rural Indian masses suddenly using plastic plates and eating utensils; etc. The oil cartel squeezes us, the oil companies gouge us, the speculators on all levels have a part, the local station owners are raising the prices daily/weekly on fuel that is paid for and in the tank underground, and our elected officials have created rules like the enron/london loophole and have likely profited from them and are now, that the light of day is shining on them, condemning them. Remember, gold is nothing more than a metal we as humans ascribe value to.

July 8, 2008 at 11:35 am

Don Kamp

Are current crude oil prices in a speculative bubble? Or is is possible that (due to 20 years of a chronic glut of oil) the dollar is terribly over valued and the price of oil is still unnaturally depressed? And just maybe we've all collectively been hypnotized into thinking that oil should still be priced at $12 to $18 per barrel (except for maybe a few smart speculators). When are people going to wake up and quit trying to use fried eggs for doing their thinking. Has everyone forgotten the 70's oil crisis except me. It was a real education, but lost on too many. And all through the 90's (while trying to speculate on oil stocks and not doing too well) I would sit in wonder while watching people load up on bigger and faster cars, motor homes, and unbelievably gas hungry motor boats. Are we really dumb or what? Some aren't and realize that oil will still be dirt cheap at $140 a barrel. And Congressmen will hate them for being smarter than they are. If I were them I would very much like to rob from the smart people and give to the stupid ones. Oh! And another thing: If you can't beat 'em, join 'em. What I mean is: Why is the Federal Reserve Bank fiddle farting around with the M1 money supply? It's pretty much futile. They should be speculating on commodities that have real value. Don.

July 8, 2008 at 8:45 am

Justin

Karnak Did it ever occur to you that these record "obscene" profits the oil companies are making is due to people buying more oil than ever? The profit margins tell the whole story. They haven't changed for big oil and we aren't being price gouged. They've been hovering right around 9%. So why don't we spend more time demonizing the bureaucrats that subsidize alternative energy at tax payer expense because without these government hand outs, green energy wouldn't be able to compete with petro. Why don't we demonize the bureaucrats that wont even let American oil companies exploit our own natural resources while China drills off the coast of Florida and laughs. You can bet China doesn't have our best interest at heart in regards to polluting our beaches. Alot of this rise in oil can be directly contributed to Helicopter Ben. The real criminal is the federal reserve and the government that uses coercion to force us into accepting these worthless paper greenbacks for the payment of debt. They've destroyed our dollar. If we were buying oil with real money (gold) we'd only see a fraction of the jump in the price of oil. It's total BS. It takes fascist organizations to keep this ponzi scheme system running (IRS, FBI, ATF, DEA, ect).

July 7, 2008 at 5:33 pm

Dan

Supply and Demand, that concept has gone out the window a long time ago. Why is it when the Saudis up output a few hundred thousand barrels, there is little change in the price. Let an attack on an oil platform in Africe happen and lose 100,000 barrels and the price shots up $5.00 a barrel. Oh I forgot tensions with Iran, those same tensions have been around for 7 years now. Enough with the bull, until the trading fields between stocks and commodities is leveled you will not see a difference in the price of oil. I can get $1,000,000 worth of stock by advanacing $500,000 first or I can get $1,000,000 worth of oil for $40,000, simple math smaller risk. GREED folks simple GREED

July 7, 2008 at 4:59 pm

David Harrell

err...demand has never exceeded supply, lol.

July 7, 2008 at 4:40 pm

David Harrell

Justin, Supply has never exceeded demand since the '70's embargo. Get your "facts" straight. And since the oil futures money pouring into NYMEX and swaps are totally unseen and unregulated, who thinks that upwards of a trillion is rigging that market? I do, because all that subprime loot and Bernache's gifting to large banks of hundreds of billions more, as well as Goldman Sachs and Morgan in the mix with a pocket full of hedge fund and pension monies...a trillion might be on the light side. Besides, Wall Street is drying up, while the 3 pits at the Commodities Exchange are lined up with notes littering the floor by the ton. Them dudes have to find a place to park and "invest" at 20 to 1 odds. Wouldn't you? BUT WHY STATE THE OBVIOUS? FOX, CNN, AND MSNBC WON'T. They constantly interview the very thieves propelling this scam forward. Hundreds will soon be in jail: Paulson, Bodmann, Newsome, Dodd,Bernache, etc. As soon as we get the Justice Dept. back, and all these appointed crooks of Bush's ousted, you will see the unveiling of a manipulation of stunning proportion. And BTW, 60% (not counting the aforementioned mess) is US involvement. Kinda makes ya proud, in a sick sorta way.

July 7, 2008 at 4:39 pm

Frank

Could it be possible that Congress will do something positive? Anything that can help keep oil prices in check would be helpful and that shouldn't be limited to controlling speculators. I hate Government intervention into free enterprise but oil has attained utility status and should be regulated like electricity. The one good thing that could come from high prices is that it could make it feasable to soon drill for the reported trillions of barrels of shale out West. Congress could also release some of our Stratgic Petroleum Reserve to correct the supply issue, if it is in fact a reality. While using our own supply, we could simply tell OPEC to get the price right or they can eat their oil instead of our grain. Who's going to buy it if we don't? Another positive is that high oil prices is a sign of an expanding economy.

July 7, 2008 at 4:04 pm

Greedom

from article: (near end) "As the Federal Reserve cut interest rates, the treasury bonds that are usually the preferred investment vehicle of choice for pension funds and endowments no longer could keep pace with inflation so they plowed into oil." I do say - that's just one more negative side to these low rates. Wasn't in Jan ? this year 2008 ? Treasury bills went negative for the first time ? I say speculators can only do so much damage even in oil with a dollar made of straw. hmm straw hmm - tin man ? poppies ? why ?

July 7, 2008 at 3:35 pm

Karnak ..

Justin, do you actually believe that Congress and the oil companies are doing anything to help consumers?? Or, do you think they are doing whatever they can get away with to improve their own profits?? -- Congress does nothing but talk, and the oil companies do nothing but crank out more excuses.. Big oil has no incentive to try to increase production while they are making record profits at the present pace and M.O. -- Congress won't act because they are afraid of the people they have taken so much money from over the years.. -- We have billions of barrels of oil and trillions of cu. ft. of natural gas here in the USA.. Congress is not writing any legislation to encourage production, and big oil is not lobbying to get at it.. All we hear is a lot of malarkey that they release to news outlets to make us consumers think something constructive is happening.. All this big talk started during the Carter years, and almost nothing has been accomplished except for the raising of prices ...

July 7, 2008 at 3:17 pm

Justin

what abuse Karnak? We are in a secular bull market in commodities. Oil will correct to the $120 range, but I can guarantee we'll see oil at $200 before it goes under $100. Throw in a hurricane or an attack on Iran and you can kiss $120 a barrell crude right out the window. Until supply meets demand, we'll continue to see oil rise. It really is that simple.

July 7, 2008 at 2:47 pm

bob johnson

Liz Pls note that ICE OTC trades nat gas and electricity, NOT oil futures. So to the extent that the "ENRON loophole" refers to OTC platforms, closing this loophole has zero impact on oil prices. also, since 2006 ICE has provided any info CFTC has requested on WTI trading on ICE Futures...your comment that "...US regulators have an eye only on what goes on in New York..." is incorrect. Recent testimony reveals that less than 15% of WTI open interest results from ICE trading, and WTI settlement prices are set only on NYMEX. Focusing on ICE as the "bogeyman" diverts us from identifying the true impact of speculators vs supply/demand issues, and leads us to a deadend of vapid policy prescriptions. Why not start with the cartel of 13 producers who set price?

July 7, 2008 at 2:45 pm

Karnak ..

Let's face it, Folks.. Congress has been taking so much money and perks from big oil for so long that they are now impotent and/or reluctant to protect the consumer.. Regulations, anti-trust actions, and trading caps should have been activated long ago.. Free market forces are not controlling oil prices.. This is the exact instance in which the federal gov't has to take a stand to stop the abuse ...

July 7, 2008 at 12:54 pm

about this blog

  • Elizabeth MacDonald is the stocks editor for Fox Business Network. She is recognized as one of the top prize-winning business journalists in the country, and has received 14 awards, including the top prize in business journalism, the Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business Journalism, and the Newswomen's Club of New York Front Page Award for Excellence in Investigative Journalism.