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Wednesday, May 28, 2008
Walter E. Williams :: Townhall.com Columnist
Futures Markets
by Walter E. Williams
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In searching for villains for rising food and oil prices, some commentators have turned to speculators, namely people trading on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange and similar exchanges around the world. A sample of the claims: "Biofuels and droughts can't fully explain the recent food crisis -- hedge funds and small investors bear some responsibility for global hunger." "The global food crisis is likely to persist if speculative investment by the corporate world is not reined in soon, warned a top expert responsible for reporting to the United Nations on human rights violations." "Financial speculators reap profits from global hunger."

Instead of condemning commodity speculation, we ought to recognize the vital function it serves. Let's look at it with a simplified example that captures the essence of speculation in commodity futures markets.

Say that today's price of corn is $6 a bushel. I have a hunch that because of future supply and demand conditions, such as drought, war and increased other uses for corn, that in May 2009 corn will sell for $12 a bushel. I stand to make a lot of money if I buy corn now for $6 a bushel, hold it, and in May 2009 sell it for $12 a bushel. Sure, I've made a bundle of money for myself but is my speculative activity deserving of condemnation? The answer is no; I've served a valuable social function.

Supposing my guess is correct about future supply and demand conditions and corn will be scarcer in the future, what is the socially wise thing to do now so that more will be available in the future? The answer is to use less corn now. How do you get people to voluntarily use less corn now? If you said, "Let the price rise," go to the head of the class. That is exactly what happens as other speculators and I buy corn now. Today's price of corn will be bided up. The result is people will use less corn now and more corn will be available in May 2009 than would be the case if the current price of corn remained at $6. The valuable function of futures markets is that of allocating goods over time. It is wise to take the future into account in decisions that one makes today.

The futures market is no bed of roses. My guess could be wrong. There could be a bumper crop of corn and its May 2009 price might be $3 a bushel. I'd have to sell corn that I bought today for $6 a bushel for $3 in May 2009 and suffer a big loss.

We all are speculators to one degree or another. Last August, my home heating oil company offered its customers a deal. I purchased 900 gallons of oil for a spot price of $2.64 a gallon. I made the purchase with the expectation that oil prices would rise over the winter months. The previous year, I purchased 900 gallons and lost because heating oil fell from the spot price at which it was purchased. Another example is when you expect gasoline prices to be higher next week; you fill up you tank this week.

The futures market, which takes into account both the present and the future availability of goods, is a vital part of a smoothly functioning economy. Unfortunately, that fact provides little comfort to people frustrated over the high prices of food and fuel. As such, it provides fodder for political demagogues, charlatans and quacks who rush in with blame and prepare "solutions" for the problems they themselves have created -- the high prices for food and fuel are directly linked to the policies of the White House and Congress.

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About The Author
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
 
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Newsflash: The price of oil is dropping
Here's a link to an article on Bloomberg.com entitled: Saudi Aramco Cuts June Crude Prices to U.S., Europe (FOR THIRD MONTH IN A ROW).This in response to weak demand.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_en&refer=energ y&sid=a.QieK8yyS2w

Now ask yourself, why didn't these billionaires (who are jacking up oil prices thru speculation) lose their asses when the price dropped. Why didn't Exxon Mobil and the other oil companies say "Sorry, you can keep your contracts, we'll buy from Saudi Aramco."

There is only one reason that I can think of, and that is that Exxon Mobil and the others are part of the speculation process. In fact, I bet they are making billions doing this, and they can because they are a defacto partner with OPEC in a cartel that has, in effect, cornered the market.

If there was real competition in oil and gas, we would have thousands of producers and hundreds of small and medium sized oil refineries. We would have adequate supplies and true price competition. These companies would advertise, like they did in the old days, when they provided half of the sponsorship for weekend sporting events.

WE do not have competition, and I suspect that these companies have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the coffers of local and national politicians to make sure that it stays that way. With skyrocketing profits, they have no incentive whatsoever to increase production.

Newsflash: We're being taken for a ride
Here's a link to an article on Bloomberg.com entitled: Saudi Aramco Cuts June Crude Prices to U.S., Europe (FOR THIRD MONTH IN A ROW).This in response to weak demand.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=email_en&refer=energ y&sid=a.QieK8yyS2w

Now ask yourself, why didn't these billionaires (who are jacking up oil prices thru speculation) lose their asses when the price dropped. Why didn't Exxon Mobil and the other oil companies say "Sorry, you can keep your contracts, we'll buy from Saudi Aramco."

There is only one reason that I can think of, and that is that Exxon Mobil and the others are part of the speculation process. In fact, I bet they are making billions doing this, and they can because they are a defacto partner with OPEC in a cartel that has, in effect, cornered the market.

If there was real competition in oil and gas, we would have thousands of producers and hundreds of small and medium sized oil refineries. We would have adequate supplies and true price competition. These companies would advertise, like they did in the old days, when they provided half of the sponsorship for weekend sporting events.

WE do not have competition, and I suspect that these companies have poured hundreds of millions of dollars into the coffers of local and national politicians to make sure that it stays that way. With skyrocketing profits, they have no incentive whatsoever to increase production.

Sorry for the repost
My mistake

Nick Nick Double Double Post Post
"why didn't these billionaires (who are jacking up oil prices thru speculation) lose their asses when the price dropped."

A lot of them did.

I know of one company in Singapore that lost 90 something million dollars in the natural gas market, and their Tokyo parent company sold them off at a loss.

Your comments are essentially more class envy frustration. It's always nice to be able to find some "bad guys" to vilify when prices are going crazy. It gives us something to vent over.

Why is it the politicians who created the circumstances in the first place never get any blame? The guys who won't let us drill off-shore or in Alaska, and the guys who make it cost prohibitive with conflicting rules to create new refineries? Why doesn't anybody ever want to vent against these guys?

August 08 IPE futures is about $130/bbl. Yesterday it was $132/bbl. I'm not exactly sure if that's exactly what you want to call "dropping".

LOL, Walter most people who
try to game the futures market take a bath. That includes the "mini-markets" around town like trying to guess what gas prices are going to do.

Oil Market Cornered:
That's all very nice Professor Williams but the truth of the matter is "Big Oil" which includes Opec and all the Oil Companies have cornered the market. They're the only game in town with rising demand, even if high demand were to go away, they're still the only game in town, unless something else comes along and it will, it's right around the corner, big oil will continue their record profits per quarter swagger. Until then, $200 barrel is par for the course.

As usual,
Professor Williams makes perfect sense. Of course the price of oil is rising. Thats what happens when demand goes up and you refuse to increase the supply. The congress of the United States refuses to allow increased production in this country. And when you burn half your food, what do you expect to happen?

Not to worry
Maxine Waters (Commiecrat - L.A.) says she and the rest of the liberals intend on nationalizing the oil industry in the U.S. thus proving that the Hugo's of the world have nothing on the U.S. communists.

After the government takes over the oil companies gas will be $59.00/gal and rationed (except for politicians).

Sam is a Moron
Apparently you decided to address a subject you thought important and not what Dr Williams was talking about.

Email Your Congressman
I have chastised my representative, Frank Wolf, for doing exactly as Dr. Williams says. Wolf has bragged about going after speculators as a way of bringing down prices. Why not do what Nixon did and just out in price controls. That is why we had so much cheap oil in the early 70s. Oh wait. Never mind.

Corn
As long as non-food uses for corn are government subsidized, the price of corn will be artificially high. Food prices will come down (or , at least, not rise as fast) if Congress ends subsidies for ethanol.

Odd that the government used to stop my grandpa from making ethanol.

I don't usually disagree but....
I think Dr. William's example assumes people acting rationally which is rare in real life. I believe that the more common reaction would be people increasing demand out of fear that the price is soon going to double.

The price of corn then becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. The example is very much like telling a car salesman what you are willing to pay for a car before you begin to negotiate a sales price.

It is human nature. In my years in advertising I have found that little works better than tags such as, "limited supply" and "don't be the last to get yours". I think that futures markets send that message.

To: Simple Sucker Sam
Dr. Williams(and Dr. Sowell) always makes the complicated appear simple. That is sign of genius. On the other hand, there are some blog posters here at Townhall who take the simple and make it complicated. That is a sign of stupidity(i.e Sam)

Townhall posters...
...will you who think that the rise in profits of oil companies is the result of greed on the part of the companies please state how many shares of oil company stock you own? You are aware that the companies are for sale Monday thru Friday on the NYSE,are you not? Don't you want in on all these obscene profits?Until you tell me how many shares you own,I will assume you are just blowing smoke.

OK, But
Why does each new investment fad these days have to progress into a bubble before reality sets in? Is this just how it always was?

Nam65-66
You will not get a reply because you are stating the obvious. Most people DONT read the prospectus for the mutual funds inside their qualified retirement plan. If people had two marbles rolling in their brain, they would WANT Oil Companies to make record profits and have strong profit margins.
These companies are for sale Monday-Friday, and so are commodities. Most folks will NEVER understand this concept because they are waiting on this liberal Maxine Waters to Socialize..oops I mean Nationalize the Oil industry.

Oil price is dropping
and the dollar is strengthening. All part of the cycle some of us who are no longer young have witnessed before.

Unca and subsidies
First, Unca. I just showed you an article that said Saudi has lowered its price three months in a row. Your response is that its still going up. Seems like there's a disconnect somewhere, and I think big oil is the one brandishing the smoke and mirrors.

People cannot relate anymore to a monopoly or oligopoly. In better days the govt would step in and break them up, and set the market straight. And of course, supply and demand would take care of itself. Now it seems, the only ones being taken care of are our fat congressmen. I'd love to see their Swiss bank accounts.

Also, based on the Farm Bill, it seems that the governments new way to keep consumer prices down is to give the providers billions in subsidies in addition to their profits. I can't wait to see Congress try and convince us that the oil industry needs subsidies (although I think I read somewhere that they already get them, for this "project" or that.

Problem With The Futures Market
The problem with the futures market is the ability to buy "Naked Shorts". This is when the futures seller is unable to locate and borrow a commodity or stock but is allowed to loan the futures buyer the commodity or stock at a price that will make a gain if the price rises in the future.

This creates a price bubble much bigger than the market is able to support. Both oil and food are in such a bubble.

I have a suggestion.
In economics, as in life, if the answer is simple and popular--IT IS WRONG. Blaming the evil boogeyman is the standard practice of morons and politicians (sorry for the redundancy).

Dr. Sowell constantly disabuses both groups, but judging by some of the comments above, he has much more work to do.

NONSENSE
JRMwo, your argument is nonsense. The futures markets are zero-sum games, meaning that for each and every winner in the futures market there is and must be an equal loser. So while the "amount" of a product such as oil involved in the transactions in the futures market is at any given time 100 times or more of the amount of the product actually available, the "long" positions (buying the product for future delivery) are exactly offset by the "short" positions (selling the product for future delivery) and so the net positions in the futures markets are always equal to zero, nada, nil, zilch.

That's why the futures markets are so valuable. At any given time, if more of today's investors think prices are more likely to rise than fall in the future, futures prices will be bid up and vice versa, giving the markets a clear signal today of expectations for the future. What's even better is that the scale of investment in the futures markets is so large relative to the actual amount of the commodities in existence that NOBODY can "corner the market." There are just too many traders and too many markets across the globe to buy and sell the contracts that it is simply not feasible to manipulate prices.

JRMtwo
Your comment is ignorant.

Short sales do not create bubbles, though 'panic' repurchases to cover the borrowed commodity might exacerbate a price move.

In fact, short sales tend to stabilize markets, by creating a whole group of buyers where they might otherwise not exist (paricularly in selling panics).

Again, the simple answer is not the real answer.

Futures market
Letter to the locale newspaper:
Dr. Walter Williams is one of the most insightful commentators that I regularly read.
If you publish him, I will subscribe to the daily and Sunday for two years.
The added bonus is that he happens to be black. This is a bonus only in if you do not discriminate agains black conservatives.
Keith Wilkening
Bloomington, MN

NICK: IN BETTER DAYS
the government would step in and break them up??
Those were better days???
In my 70 years I have observed that anything the "Government" gets involved in is instantly F.U.B.A.R. (Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition)
I cleaned that up nicely. Instead of calls for government trying to straighten out anything let's get the government out of everything not authorized by the Constitution!

But Walter,
someone must be blamed. The evil oil companies are passe. O'reilly has been beating that drum for years and has failed to generate his hoped for level of outrage. Maybe, you are having an effect, after all. So now, it on to the futures traders. That is a relatively complex system not well understood by most people and so, easily used by the manipulators in Congress or other demagogues. Your explanation of the market is very simple and all that most people need to know. The demagogues can throw out words like arbitrage, short positions, calls and puts, and most people will think they actually know something about the market and it becomes complex enough for the average person to suspect that the big boys, the experts, are gaming the system for their benefit and our loss. As BobDoyle points out, the only winners and losers in this market are the players. The public benefits by a more accurate price and less volatility. I know it may seem like oil is very volatile right now but, would it be better to see a higher price now slowly, or wait until a much larger price spike is required over a much shorter period when the actual supply comes up short of the actual demand.

Nick in Austin
You're right. Congress needs to investigate the oil companies, maybe demand that their CEOs appear before them. This can all be cleared up if only government will get more involved.

Oh, wait....

Vic
But if the potential futures trader will just read The Wall Street Journal, she can really clean up. Don't forget Hillary's experience.

All you liarberals
Please tell us EXACTLY, step-by-step and cent-by-cent, how you intend to reduce the price paid for gasoline by the American People, by imposing additional taxes on the oil companies, since the new taxes will be added to the price, and WE THE PEOPLE PAY ALL TAXES. You could reduce the price by eliminating all the taxes, and replacing them with ONE proper tax to collect all revenue for each level of government..

Eliminate the 18.4 cents per gallon federal pump tax, and the 32 cents per gallon, PA State pump tax. Eliminate all the other taxes in existence, on all levels of government, which add up to one-third (1/3) of the price – of everything.

You could greatly reduce the price by writing a law which declares that ALL OFFSHORE OIL BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, and hiring the oil companies to drill, pump, refine, and deliver all petroleum products to us for the cost of processing plus 10 cents per gallon profit.

This would eliminate the foreign nations’ price per barrel, the speculators’ add-on charge, the oil-tanker-ship charge, the oil spills when the tanker ships run aground, and the clean-up cost thereof. This would reduce the price for refined petroleum to well under a dollar a gallon, and make us independent of the Arabs and all other oil-selling peoples.

You could also reduce the price by no longer wasting our oil and wasting our food supply by diluting our gasoline with alcohol and making it inefficient. Gasoline provides energy by exploding in the engine, while alcohol burns and does not explode, providing no energy.

Polly
Yeah, Shrillary is really good at those cattle futures.

Nick in Austin, re Saudis
The Saudis do not set oil prices. They sell a large fraction of the world's supply of oil, and OPEC together sells an even larger fraction; but, try as they might (and they *have* tried), they do not have the power to set prices.

Serious Thought
When you search for useful information, realise that ALL that is presented as NEWS is only OPINION. Whose opinion do I prefer to take most seriously? Those who put their own money on it, Futures Traders.

Intrusive Government
This nation at present is confronted by a world come alive with the urge to compete, it seems as if Yankee ingenuity has come of age and we the Yankees are not competing well, the premium of products to maintain the economy has risen because of the competition for those products. More has to be produced to bring the price in line or the ability to make use of the product has to improve.

We are living with a Congressional Politburo made up of dumbkopfs and fear mongers. Instead of the American public standing up for itself and throwing these clowns out of office, we are being manipiulated into believing that socialism is better than capitalism, that thinking small is more American than the dream of "be all you can" or that you need to put on a sweater instead of turning up the heat, not build the resources to produce more heat for energy. Jimmy "the Peanut" Carter thinking, double digit inflation, small mindedness, stay manipulated for as long as we can make you.

Grow up America, these are the people we look down on, small minded non achievers who want a free ride on your back. Time to kick them out of the catbirds seat and retake the helm and keep our future as bright as Yankee ingenuity can make it.

Futures as Fiction
One curious aspect of futures is that in actuality they are nothing more than a piece of paper. The ownership of a futures contract does not include title to any of the underlying commodity. In other words, if I own a contract for Aug corn, I never own a single kernel of that grain. Normally, these contracts are exhanged for others prior to expiration. In the rare instance where the contract is held until expiration, its buyer and seller settle up according to the price in the spot markets where the actual goods are sold. It's a high stakes game of chance, but there are too many players to manipulate by any individudal. That's not to say the market is not subject to mob psychology.

Problem with futures market.
Say a farmer "books" his crop with a buyer at 8 dollars a bushel. When the harvest comes, the market price has fallen to 6 dollars a bushel. The buyer declares bankruptcy and walks away. However, if at harvest the price per bushel has risen to 10 dollars, and the farmer trys to get out of the deal with the buyer by declaring bankruptcy, a judge will say no, supply the crop at the booked price. This has happened time and time again.

Sam of Nebraska
Sam, you might be right. I respect Dr. Williams for his reasoning ability, but that doesn't mean that everything he says is right. I do, however, disagree with the tone of your comment. Why do you need to have such a sarcastic critical tone? Does it help win anybody to your side who isn't already there? I worry because most of us have lost the ability to disagree with each other without being agressive. That's too bad, because in the past a lot has been learned through respectful and humble discussions of issues.

Moonbat Exterminator
I have heard of people who bought futures and messed up and allowed them to mature without trading them. They were contacted to arrange delivery of their commodity.

So if you by aug corn and allow the future to matrure and expire be prepared to accept delivery of some corn.

We've seen Enron...
so we know it is possible to manipulate energy markets. However, I haven't seen anyone provide any evidence whatsoever that this is happening with crude oil. AFA Nick in Austin, I read your link and if the price asked by Saudi Aramco is $2 below the WTI benchmark, but the benchmark is up $20, the cost of oil is going up regardless!

As a long time Royal Dutch (now Royal Dutch Shell plc), I try to keep tabs on things in the oil biz. The average realized price for crude they got last year was around $66. First quarter this year was around $90, so obviously the world price for crude is resulting in higher earnings for upstream crude producers. Of course, of the 10 largest crude producers in the world, only two are public companies (no 5 British Petroleum and No 7 Exxon Mobil) so there isn't much Congress could do about crude price even if they wanted to. I note also that Royal Dutch Shell earned $3 billion in oil trading last year, whether this represents speculation or something else I can't say.

Docwaters
What you describe is not a problem of a futures market. If time and time again buyers are declaring bankruptcy and leaving farmers holding the bag, I am confused. Are there not other buyers willing to pay the market price for the commodity? Are buyers declaring bankruptcy over and over? Who are the major buyers of crops from farmers? Your assertions leave many questions unanswered.

Theoretically, a farmer could hedge against price movements by using the futures market. Say he is willing to commit to $8 a bushel but, thinks the price could go much higher. He could enter into a futures contract that would guarantee him the higher price but, if not, all he is out is the cost of the contract. Conversely, suppose he thinks the price may fall, he could hedge that way to protect himself if prices plummet due to an unanticipated bountiful harvest. Not something, the average family farm is likely to do one might think. I don't know too many small family farms anymore. Huge agribusiness corps grow a lot of it and, the individual farmers nowadays are pretty large sophisticated businesses themselves.

Kept looking for this post and
finally figured out that I posted it in the wrong thread. BTW a "future" is actually a
contract to buy a commodity.

Sam, Sam , Sam...
Take off the bonnet, and let the bee fly free! Some of the things you address, i.e. money over-supply causing dollar devaluation and out of control federal spending are problems and need to be dealt with. What are you doing to combat these problems?
However, if Dr. Williams were to address the points you mention in your first post, his article would become a book. Addressable? Yes. Short, readable, and to the point? Maybe not.
Do we like articles that succinct? Yes. Let's keep them that way.
I applaud Dr. Williams for his work. I wish more folks were his students.

I own oil wells
1-The price of oil is not dictated by Exxon, Chevron, or any other oil company; it is dictacted by how much is pumped out of the ground. Yes, speculators can in the short term affect the prices, but only in a 3 month window.(I traded commodities futures for 4 years, stock broker for 4 years.
The bottom line is; Stop screaming about the cost of gas and diesel as long as you do not permit drilling in Alaska(those poor polar bears), or
Coastal Florida,(those poor tourists!), or windmills off Chesapeake bay(it will ruin our view!)
In other words, cut the cr@p, you morons, shut up and pay for your gas.
Signed,
NIMBY(for you dolts, Not in my back yard).

Futures Market - Any Doubts
Hav3e any doubts about investing in the furtures market I suggest contacting Hillary Clinton and Terry McCauliff
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