SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) â Commodity traders have seen their fair share of action this year from Iranian oil threats and a global economic slowdown, but now must also face growing concern over the integrity of futures trading in the wake of the latest regulatory investigation.
Questions over the safety and integrity of trading in commodity futures are âdriving vast amounts of traders away from commodities forever,â said Kevin Kerr, president of Kerr Trading International.
âThe latest incident with the CEO of PFGBest boggles the mind, quite frankly,â he said. âInvestors should be confused and worried.â
âThere are enough reasons for investors to choose not to participate in [the commodities futures trading] environment with the awful fundamental news that we hear about every single day,â said Steve Ayer, managing director and partner at HighTower in Harrison, N.Y. âSo these potential frauds have the capability to push that already established cautious sentiment over the hump.â
âOur entire system is built upon confidence, so when people lose that confidence in the regulators, brokerage firms and/or governments, then people can say enough is enough and pull their investments,â he said
âAs I follow the scandal, I hear alarming phrases such as âreeling industry,â âshattered confidence,â and that PFGBest, in tune with MF Global, had âviolated sacrosanct client funds,ââ he said. âWhatâs even more shocking is that the corruption in this case had allegedly been going on for several years.â
Jeffrey Kennedy, chief commodities analyst at Elliott Wave International, said he sees âdecreased participation in commodity futures trading because of a lack of trust and confidence in the system.
A CFTC report of open interest for the period of November 2011, during the MF global scandal, shows that there was a âstriking drop in the amount of open interest â and that this drop is concentrated in the physical commodities, particularly the agricultural and soft commodities,â said Robert Ready, finance professor at the University of Rochesterâs Simon School of Business, whose research covers energy markets.
http://articles.marketwatch.com/201...ldings-commodity-futures-trading-commission/2
Questions over the safety and integrity of trading in commodity futures are âdriving vast amounts of traders away from commodities forever,â said Kevin Kerr, president of Kerr Trading International.
âThe latest incident with the CEO of PFGBest boggles the mind, quite frankly,â he said. âInvestors should be confused and worried.â
âThere are enough reasons for investors to choose not to participate in [the commodities futures trading] environment with the awful fundamental news that we hear about every single day,â said Steve Ayer, managing director and partner at HighTower in Harrison, N.Y. âSo these potential frauds have the capability to push that already established cautious sentiment over the hump.â
âOur entire system is built upon confidence, so when people lose that confidence in the regulators, brokerage firms and/or governments, then people can say enough is enough and pull their investments,â he said
âAs I follow the scandal, I hear alarming phrases such as âreeling industry,â âshattered confidence,â and that PFGBest, in tune with MF Global, had âviolated sacrosanct client funds,ââ he said. âWhatâs even more shocking is that the corruption in this case had allegedly been going on for several years.â
Jeffrey Kennedy, chief commodities analyst at Elliott Wave International, said he sees âdecreased participation in commodity futures trading because of a lack of trust and confidence in the system.
A CFTC report of open interest for the period of November 2011, during the MF global scandal, shows that there was a âstriking drop in the amount of open interest â and that this drop is concentrated in the physical commodities, particularly the agricultural and soft commodities,â said Robert Ready, finance professor at the University of Rochesterâs Simon School of Business, whose research covers energy markets.
http://articles.marketwatch.com/201...ldings-commodity-futures-trading-commission/2