Quote from jay21:
Dear logic_man,
I was about to think that you use profanity to compensate an intellectual deficiency in conveying a precise meaning, but your second post proves me otherwise. You do bring some substance to the table.
And no, I am not the Attorney General of the United States, so I am not gonna screw your ass.
I am not endorsing price fixing. In fact, I am with you on market transparency. Government bureaucrats are definitely way inefficient compared to the market mechanics. But lets imagine a scenario where every oil buyer is a speculator, and you are a lone oil producer. What would happen ? Oil price would climb up to $140 where at the end of the month your oil still sits in the warehouse unsold. No real demand. Sounds familiar ?
On the other side, lets say every oil buyer is a real buyer. What would happen ? I bet the oil price would be at $65 tops, its highest true cost. Similar scenario applies for food too.
I agree with you about the market in general. Yes, market is about information. Information does change. As information fluctuates, so does the market price. However, for the oil market, a reality check shows that it is not about information. It is about big capital and excessive leverage that allows price manipulation. It is ridiculous to see that two traders with $50 mil have the capability to spook the oil market. In fact, they have the power to do so. Are they real price tellers, or mere thieves hiding behind laissez-faire legality ?
In fact, I would argue due to its universal demand, oil is inherently not a free market. Nobody can live without energy, and energy comes from oil. The demand will always be there, increasing, insatiable. Same argument with food and healthcare. Nobody can live without them. Oil, Food, and Healthcare are naturally not a free market. In contrast, Gold is a free market, because even a gold bug can still live without gold around. Stocks too.
How about that ?