So, what’s the problem again?

oil trading.jpgThis Norm Alstar/NY Sunday Times article notes a recent analyst report suggesting that a stampede of institutional investors, mainly pension funds, into the commodities futures markets is actually the chief cause of the rise in oil prices, which the report characterizes as ìa bubble.î Maybe so, but as James Hamilton noted in regard to the contango situation in such markets awhile back, this is a good thing and not an ominous one as the Times article suggests.
If the speculators turn out to be right that prices will be higher in the future, then they will earn a profit and provide a benefit for consumers. By bidding up the price of oil today, oil inventories rise as owners save for the higher future price and consumers conserve so that more oil is available in case there is a shortfall in the future.
However, if the speculators bet wrong, then they will have bought high and sold low. That results in consumers paying more now for oil products than would be necessary if the future price of oil could be predicted with certainty. But consumers’ increased payments for oil products will pale in comparison to the money that the speculators will lose on their bets of higher prices in the future. Consequently, the only reason to be worried about all this is if you are concerned about the speculators losing huge amounts of money when the bubble bursts.
In short, as former Exxon CEO Lee Raymond reminds us about oil prices when he was asked recently whether he thinks that they will continue to go up:

“Maybe. But I’ll bet they’ll be lower at some point.”

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