#743028 - 02/24/12 02:36 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6830
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BTW your statement to KK
"It's nice how you are manipulating statistics by setting an arbitrary starting date."
Wouldn't a graph that only dates back to 2008 be "setting an arbitrary starting date"? Hypocrite.
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"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella
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#743035 - 02/24/12 03:07 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: stlhead]
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Resident "NFR" Contributor
Registered: 02/11/09
Posts: 2732
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Some blog? What a lame source, well Krugman has it right and that article does not debunk him as is claims. In fact if you read the article, his whole explanation is centered around the Brent crude market, which by his own admission "is a market for physical crude, it is a forward rather than a true spot market." So that futures play a role in a forward market that isn't a spot market is unsurprising and in fact couldn't be any other way but this doesn't have anything to do with the spot market we are discussing or the prices we pay at the pump. The price of oil is what the producers are willing to sell it for and what the buyers are willing to pay. That some producers point to a futures market as a justification to raise the price and the buyer willingly pays for it doesn't mean the futures market caused the price increase. The producer is claiming there is a increase in the value of oil, and the futures market is a refection of this, not a cause. Oil producers are not compelled to use futures pricing, they set whatever price they want. Oil producers love to blame speculators. But if speculators were causing the price to get out of the supply and demand equilibrium, then the producers wouldn't be able to sell oil as the price would be too high for the buyers to pay. Since they are able to keep shipping us oil, the supply and demand equilibrium must be in place. How about some studies by actual economists, both of which indicate that speculation in the futures market has no effect on prices of actual assets. http://www.jstor.org/pss/2353144http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1468-0106.2006.00308.x/abstractDebunk these for me, you know, from actual economists in peer reviewed journals, not some d-bag with a blog about peak oil conspiracies.
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#743037 - 02/24/12 03:17 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6830
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"That some producers point to a futures market as a justification to raise the price and the buyer willingly pays for it doesn't mean the futures market caused the price increase."
WHAT? HUH? ARE YOU KIDDING ME? Are you off your Ritalin? "some producers point to a futures market as a justification to raise the price" there ya go. Enough said. No more conversations with you you moron. You know what? GFY...it's the only person that will have you. And have someone switch you back from kid mode if that's possible.
_________________________
"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella
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#743039 - 02/24/12 03:26 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: stlhead]
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Stopped Making Porn for this
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 18999
Loc: Seattle, Washington USA
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#743040 - 02/24/12 03:28 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: stlhead]
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Sultan of ZZzzzing THE DECIDER
Registered: 03/07/99
Posts: 9989
Loc: SE Olympia, WA
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The amount people squawk about the increasing cost of a product is inversely proportional to the elasticity of that product's demand curve.
Oil has an inelastic demand curve. When the price goes up, everybody squawks because they know they can't live without it. That's why the demand curve is steep
If my economics classes were this lively, I wouldn't have been copping z's in the back of the lecture hall.
_________________________
Send you to heaven, take you to hell I ain't foolin', can't you tell.........I'm a live wire.
Bon Scott, Live Wire
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#743041 - 02/24/12 03:31 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: stlhead]
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Resident "NFR" Contributor
Registered: 02/11/09
Posts: 2732
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You expect the Saudis to insult us by saying to our faces, your dollar is worth less? If their price was too high, we would go buy elsewhere where it is cheaper. But guess what it isn't cheaper anywhere else, so we still buy it. The Saudis could have said, "you know why the price is up, because I shagged your mom last night, that's why" and we would have still bought it. It's simply salesman's puffery and you bought it like a sucker. Of course the Saudis would rather have you blame some businessman rather than our government. Maybe we can have our president go over there and bow down to the Saudi king again, and it will be those evil businessmen's fault. I've been saying the whole time that the rise in the price of oil and the rise in the futures contracts of oil are both caused the same factor, inflation. You are saying it is caused by speculators, but other than the Saudis and some conspirator blog, nobody else is saying this. If you read those articles I posted, economists did experiments and proved the opposite of what you claimed under controlled conditions. Speculators are not taking oil out of the market, so they don't reduce the supply. Speculators are not increasing the demand for oil by speculating on the future price. Therefore they are not causing the price increase. This is difficult for you to understand because the measurement you are using to measure value, the dollar, is constantly changing, it is being worth less and less. The dollar is a measurement of value. If we double the number of dollars in circulation tomorrow, we didn't just double the wealth in the country, we just cut the measurement in half. If the government was continually making the gallon a smaller and smaller measurement to keep the price of gas the same, it would be more obvious but the same result--you would be paying more for what you are getting. Get outside of your dollar-centric valuation and you will see that the problem isn't oil, futures contracts or speculators--it is the dollar. You know what? GFY...it's the only person that will have you. I know that's not true because I banged your mom last night... and your father too, I never did a brother and sister at the same time before.
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#743053 - 02/24/12 04:34 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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Reverend Tarpones
Registered: 10/09/02
Posts: 7817
Loc: West Duvall
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Todd's post is the best on this thread . . . by a mile.
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No huevos no pollo.
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#743055 - 02/24/12 04:39 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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River Nutrients
Registered: 03/08/99
Posts: 6830
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Seems someone also doesn't know we get most of our oil from Canada. Strike one. I've also pointed out that the price of oil DOES NOT rise with the same percentage as inflation nor percentage fall with the dollar index. If it did you could compare it to the price of a loaf of bread and oil would be much cheaper than it is. Strike two. "I know that's not true because I banged your mom last night... and your father too, I never did a brother and sister at the same time before." Well they didn't mention it so they didn't feel a thing which is proof that you are indeed a little prick. Strike three.
Edited by stlhead (02/24/12 04:41 PM)
_________________________
"You learn more from losing than you do from winning." Lou Pinella
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#743057 - 02/24/12 04:45 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: stlhead]
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Resident "NFR" Contributor
Registered: 02/11/09
Posts: 2732
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Seems someone also doesn't know we get most of our oil from Canada. Strike one. Read post #742935 in this very thread. Not only do I know that, I said that in this thread. I was talking about Saudi Arabia because YOUR article was talking about Saudi Arabia. Are you stupid or can you just not read? I've also pointed out that the price of oil DOES NOT rise with the same percentage as inflation nor percentage fall with the dollar index. If it did you could compare it to the price of a loaf of bread and oil would be much cheaper than it is. Strike two. Again this is a long term trend issue, I am not distracted by short term fluctuations. Look at the long term trend. Long term trend. But I could make the argument to you as to why the futures contracts don't directly mirror the spot price, but I'm not a fool who looks at small statistical deviations and ignores the long term trends. "I know that's not true because I banged your mom last night... and your father too, I never did a brother and sister at the same time before." Well they didn't mention it so they didn't feel a thing which is proof that you are indeed a little prick. Strike three. So you don't deny that your mother and father are in fact brother and sister. No wonder you are so stupid.
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#743058 - 02/24/12 04:50 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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redhook
Unregistered
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uhhhh stlhead, if you did FPs dad too, that makes you a FAG... nice try, but you just pop flyed out to center with that one...
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#743066 - 02/24/12 05:18 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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will always be a Juvenile at Sea
Registered: 11/15/06
Posts: 708
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I was supposed to say I [Bleeeeep!] his dad too, I'm sorry I screwed it up. So what's the problem? Who's dad did I get nasty with? Was it a bearded dude? I don't like beards, they remind me too much of chuck norris
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#743069 - 02/24/12 05:28 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: Bigjim]
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Resident "NFR" Contributor
Registered: 02/11/09
Posts: 2732
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Go back to your glory hole. At least you can't screw that up. I was the one who said I banged stlhead's father, jebus it's like www.moron.com around here.
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#743070 - 02/24/12 05:36 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: FishPrince]
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redhook
Unregistered
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after re reading that, i saw that, but didnt want to seem like an over zealous douchebag and change it to something else, so i just left it there... quoting isnt so hard to do actually... so i got a pop fly out on myself... BOOOOOO
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#743081 - 02/24/12 06:21 PM
Re: gotta love it ...
[Re: Keta]
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Resident "NFR" Contributor
Registered: 02/11/09
Posts: 2732
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Every economic experiment that has been conducted has concluded that futures markets prevent asset bubbles and markets without futures are prone to them. There were no rampant futures trading in the real estate bubble. There was trading in Real Estate that caused the bubble, why was there dysfunctional trading in the Real Estate market? It wasn't futures, it was government extending too much credit. What caused the dot-com bubble, it wasn't futures market, it was the government extending too much credit. Futures markets actually contain asset bubbles and resolve them without causing a bubble in the underlying asset. Every time the government over-extends credit or currency, the money has to go somewhere and it gets mal-invested because when overextended the financial system has too much money or credit to rationally invest but it has to invest anyway so it invests irrationally and causes a bubble.
If you think the price of oil is going to rise, then you have 2 options:
1. Buy a futures contract 2. Buy and hoard oil
Since the first, does not take any oil out of the system, it doesn't effect supply and demand and thus the price of oil. The second however, does remove oil from the market and the hoarder does increase the price of oil. But speculation in a futures market does not effect the market like hoarding does.
The article, refers to futures markets as a false demand, it is not a false demand, it is a representation of FUTURE demand. This travel blogger, who isn't an economist, doesn't understand that futures do not increase or create demand. Most futures contracts are not consummated with the delivery of a barrel of oil but rather by selling the future contract to someone else. In this way, they can be sold again and again without effecting the price of oil. The profits and losses come from other participants in the oil futures market, not from traders who solely operate in the spot market. The supply of oil is finite, but the demand is increasing not because of futures markets. More and more countries are consuming more and more oil, and we compete against them by bidding for them in the marketplace.
The fact that there is speculation in a future market does not address the underlying question. WHY do people think the price is going to go up? It's like saying the price is going up because people are betting it will go up. But this doesn't answer the question of why prices are rising or why the betters are winning these bets, it just moves the question. Why are these people so sure that the price will rise to the point where they will risk real dollars to bet on it? There are actual real world reasons that the price of oil will go up, they are the government, their inflation policy for one, their saber rattling in the middle east for a second.
What do you think would happen to oil prices if the government quit inflating the currency and quit going to war in the middle east? It would go down or at least level off and the futures market would crash.
The futures market is a boogyman that the scumbag politicians and their bootlickers use to scare people from looking at the actual problem: the government.
The people trading oil futures are a symptom of a problem, not the cause. We need to strike the root. We need to treat the underlying disease, not the symptom.
If oil prices are rising on the anticipation that prices will rise in the future, the oil future price is a reflection of this anticipation, not the cause. Something is causing this anticipation. Just brushing off the reasons and blaming the futures market doesn't answer where this anticipation is coming from, it just moves the question.
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