So.. I just read the thread suggesting the outlawing of margin trading. Someone raised the legitimate point that this would just limit the market to large players with tons of capital rather than eliminating speculation.
So how about a sliding scale? If your total position is worth up to a million dollars, your margin is X per contract. If your position is 1 to 5 million dollars, it's (0.9 * x). 5 to 10 million is (0.8 * x), etc. This still lets small traders play as much as they can now, but reduces leverage as you get bigger.
You could even waive the deleveraging (or reduce the amount of deleveraging) for hedgers. The CFTC already keeps track of hedging vs. speculative positions; just set up different margin structures for each.
Would this work, theoretically, given that all futures markets in the world would do the same thing at the same time? (I'm more interested in how this change would affect futures market dynamics than the practicalities of international regulatory politics, so pretend we can wave a magic wand and make all the futures markets worldwide do the same thing.) How would this play out in the market if all oil exchanges did this tomorrow?
I also like the idea mentioned of testing for speculation vs fundamentals by holding public hearings on whether margin requirements ought to be raised, to see if that makes oil drop 20% instantly..
R
So how about a sliding scale? If your total position is worth up to a million dollars, your margin is X per contract. If your position is 1 to 5 million dollars, it's (0.9 * x). 5 to 10 million is (0.8 * x), etc. This still lets small traders play as much as they can now, but reduces leverage as you get bigger.
You could even waive the deleveraging (or reduce the amount of deleveraging) for hedgers. The CFTC already keeps track of hedging vs. speculative positions; just set up different margin structures for each.
Would this work, theoretically, given that all futures markets in the world would do the same thing at the same time? (I'm more interested in how this change would affect futures market dynamics than the practicalities of international regulatory politics, so pretend we can wave a magic wand and make all the futures markets worldwide do the same thing.) How would this play out in the market if all oil exchanges did this tomorrow?
I also like the idea mentioned of testing for speculation vs fundamentals by holding public hearings on whether margin requirements ought to be raised, to see if that makes oil drop 20% instantly..

R