Quote from Brass:
I think it's funny that "traders" at a trading site would question how speculation could possibly ever cause price overreach, regardless of the underlying circumstances. No such thing as speculative excess, eh? Yeah, market prices are always determined by calm and reflective economic utilitarians.
Quote from cgroupman:
As related to the price of gold, good read actually, here in the U.S. I would like to see a similar analysis about Europe and Asia.
c
Quote from MKTrader:
While other "traders" defend statements like "We need to take strong action to protect consumers from this speculation"?
Thanks, Nancy. We'll let you make millions from your permanent political class rigged games, but please, reign in us evil speculators.
And how do we know it's overreach? Because Pelosi or Exxon say so? Do we really know where oil should be priced in an age of apparently non-ending ZIRP, Middle East tensions, and totally misguided domestic energy policy? The Forbes article was spot-on. Look at oil's price in terms of gold, not printed paper from a bankrupt nation.
If we have another major recession, maybe oil will fall sharply again. But for now, it is what it is. It's up to Pelosi and her ilk to control spending, de-regulate productive energy sources (and stop subsidizing pseudo-science green energy), etc. Speculators are simply pricing in the world we live in and its misguided policies.
I don't know who you're talking about. I defended no one. I merely questioned anyone who doubts that this price run has a speculative element attached to it.Quote from MKTrader:
While other "traders" defend statements like "We need to take strong action to protect consumers from this speculation"?
Quote from Brass:
I don't know who you're talking about. I defended no one. I merely questioned anyone who doubts that this price run has a speculative element attached to it.