O.K., I should let sleeping dogs lie, but I am on a long weekend from the only club that pays me to show up (my employer) so why not have a few provacative blows at this topic...
>O.K., let's try real hard to find the cause of this commodities boom, could it be, oh let's see....trying to bring almost two billion people from an animal/people powered society into the modern era in a decade time span? (China/India)....could it be that we came off a commodities collapse in the 1980's early 1990's, so that gold is still cheaper in adjusted inflation terms than it was in the 1970's? Could it be that investors who have gotten their clock cleaned on successive bubbles from the S&L crash (housing collapse? I remember the 1980's....I laugh at housing collapses....HA, HA, HA,:-O), to the internet "tech bubble" crash, to the Euro bubble, to....yep, you got it...someone told them to go "with the hard assets, the metals, the oils, we will always need those (true enough, but when the value of money exchanged on these items begins to wildly exceed the world value of these items, something is getting ready to happen....but, money has to go somewhere, and where to put it? You try to choose, and remember, historically it's not been such a great idea to buy items at historic highs (oil, gas, commodities are getting closer to the all time top)
Let's admit it, the commodities bubble is just that, a bubble, and it shows signs of collapsing even bigger and sooner than the housing bubble...only two wild card holds them this high and that is China/India. Most stats show that if you take these two out, the efficiency of production/use/recycling of commodities has improved in the developed world, and demand has not really risen appreciably. Energy consumption in the U.S. for example has went down, not up, as a percent of GDP...
Which brings us to this dollar thing....I am going to go out on a limb here and say the dollar is not that bad of a bet.
I know, I know, all bets are that a MASSIVE currency collapse is coming, that we will have panic in the street as even hookers and Starbucks will turn down dollars (my creditors are still accepting them, however), and the dollar will fall to nothing compared to.....(???), and there's the rub....compared to what?
Ohhh, that's right, the mighty Euro, the currency of a..."group" (??) of nations several of whom have recently renounced it's own charter....founded by a nation whom, along with it's biggest most powerful neighbor and fellow member run constantly out of complience with all the groups own memoranda of understanding on budget deficits, currency valuation, work rules and interest rates...a group with an aging demographic that is sure to be a greater burden on it's social system than even the U.S. Social Security system faces...and that is, as a percentage of GNP, a bigger importer of oil and gas than the U.S., and with it's only "internal" oil and gas supply dropping like a stone, and with a Muslim minority far greater than that of the U.S., and far more militant and directly connected to the "struggles" for Islamic and Arabic "liberation" than that in the United States.....THE EURO???? !!!!!!
BUT THE CHINESE!! They are coming after us, don't ya' know....of course, they have their own energy woes, and not only that, are driven by exports to....well, mostly us, despite attempts to diversify, because the EU does not fancy being buried in cheap Chinese plastic items after all....and the above mentioned rise in commodity prices mean those cheap plastic items are not so cheap after all....
As I sit typing this, I have the local news on TV, here in central Kentucky....where Toyota is announcing expansion of it's large modern plant in Georgetown KY to build the Camry Hybrid, where Honda is looking at Southern Indiana or Ohio to expand Civic production, and where UPS is expanding before even it's last expansion is finished to cope with increasing air freight to and from the aforementioned China. Now one assumes that Honda and Toyota, selling cars in the U.S., and China, selling everything from Christmas cards to auto and truck brakes in the U.S., fully intend to take payment in....dollars, maybe?
I look at the stock charts....I should have bought oil and gas stocks, right?
Well, only if I ignore Cummins Engine, Caterpiller, and Deere&Co, who have went anywhere from double to triple in the last 3 to 5 years, BEFORE you count dividend reinvestment....who'd a thunk it?
One more thing....try to avoid the phrase "peak everything". It is a clear violation of the terms of true "Peak" and simply makes no sense (peak aluminum? It's recycleable material, and is still cheap enough that you don't even see the homeless and poor out walking the highway to pick up cans...peak iron or steel? Demand is high yes, but Australia alone has enough to provide for a century, they just don't have enough manpower to get it out fast enough...."peak everything" makes those concerned about the real issue of peak oil or "oil and gas depletion" sound silly by association, and borders on "Chicken Little syndrome".
Folks, the depletion of oil and gas are real issues, and deserving of hard, HARD work on replanning our energy system, conservation, and applied engineering. We may need to work on getting a grip here and trying to stay a bit more on topic.
<Funny how you choose the only two commodities, iron and aluminium, that are still in very good supply to make your point.>
Right, as opposed to say Gold, Silver or Platinum, which of course are in short supply because no one bothers to recycle them but just throws them in the landfill...
I grew up on the poor side of the tracks where in the old days of copper plumbing, you were careful who you rented to or they would tear that out of the house and sell it for scrap....
You are spot on. Call a spade a spade and let the masses froth at the mouth. When prices depart vertically from facts it's time to piss against the wind. You will get wet for a while, no doubt, but soon it will be the crowd that will look for umbrellas.
Oil Fact (just one): The daily volume of oil and oil product futures traded in NYMEX and ICE (ex-IPE) alone, currently exceeds global daily oil exports by a factor of 10-to-1. When you add the spot market and the OTC derivatives the ratio gets much bigger. Last year it was 5-to-1; I don't know where the ratio was at the bottom of 1998, but I would guess alot lower. We are getting drowned in paper oil.
So what? The volume of other derivatives traded (foreign exchange and interest rate contracts)outstrips the volume of the underlying assets to a vastly greater extent than with oil. Who cares?
Currencies, bonds, stocks, etc. are not commodities, though they do trade in futures exchanges. Comparison between the two is completely inappropriate and irrelevant. Think of just this: currencies are units of measurement, not goods themselves.
We can print increasingly large amounts of money, and have. We can mine increasingly large amounts of metal, and haven't. It's going to take a while for the copper mines to increase enough to make up for the way the dollars have been increasing. Figure on a lag time of five years minimum, and that's assuming that we don't do something really, really, stupid, like fight a war with the Moslem world.
This is only true of Fiat money. If we remained on the gold standard or any hybrid with silver, their would be implied value (i.e. dollar for set amount of gold).
Utility values are derived by any given person in the absence of money. So if there were utility values published I think they would be completely open to interpretation.
So why should I worry about them, if I am interested in what the oil price will be? And why should I be concerned about the high volume of trading in derivatives of oil contracts?
You will need an understanding of derivatives and wikipedia is great for that. Basically derivates have created a lot of "stuff on paper". Businesses engage in off balance sheet activities like credit swaps where two companies basically swap credit access so on net they are both better off, but barely. Bur barely when talking about billion of dollars, turns into a lot. So when we are trading 10 times the amount of oil available, it shouldn't take much more to figure out the consequences.
My question was a rhetorical one. I cannot for the life of me see why the price of oil should be likely to fall sharply, just because more futures and derivatives of oil are traded than there is physical oil being delivered.
I see you're point. I think futures trading may have sped up the price increases a little faster and now that the long term implications are becoming more and more clear, the futures traders are going to make that much more money as they ride this down.
Because when there is a sudden rush to close open positions in futures and other derivatives and the "paper" stuff overwhelms the "real" stuff 10-to-1 there is no demand for the excess from the physical trade (eg hedging) and therefore a plunge ensues. Since prices for the "real" stuff today get set to a very large extent by marking to the futures market (the tail wagging the dog) the price of physical "stuff" collapses as well.
The game can be played from the other direction as well, of course; and it has been - oh boy has it ever...
Your answer would explain a strong movement of the price in any direction. But it does not address my question, because
You still have to show empirically that trading has actually become more volatile with the growth in derivatives volume. By the way, I doubt this is true.
You have not shown why we should in the near future expect a sudden rush to close open positions.
Emperically volatility in the current market is actually at it's lowest levels in decades. I can't find the right chart though. I will keep looking.
There will be no suden rush to close position due to the finite nature of oil. I think most people here would agree that there will be no price collapse sans some unforseen catastrophic event that produces more oil.
I'm sorry, but at this point I respectfully suggest you refer to a good book relating to the basics of commodities futures and options trading. The questions you pose indicate you are unfamiliar with most all basics and while I would be otherwise inclined to provide such an education I am afraid the medium is not appropriate.
Well, if the medium is not appropriate, you could at least refer the readership here to a good book relating to the basics of oil futures trading. I think that would suffice for providing such an education.
Whenever you want to learn anything head on over to wikipedia.com It may not be completely accurate it will provide a very thorough basic foundation for most queries.
Any search in your favorite internet bookseller will turn up dozens of books - pick whichever you like best. Alternatively, if you want to get more serious about this, NY Inst. of Finance has several appropriate courses. Again, this site is obviously not the medium for commodities training, so I must take a pass at providing it myself, here.
There is a comment further below about all the futures contracts being used for hedging and therefore their current huge volume is immaterial. That is false for two reasons:
Hedging involves the transfer of risk: futures trading is a zero sum game. If you win, I lose. So, if you are a producer and sell 1.000 oil contracts short to hedge from its price going down someone else has to assume that risk. That someone is called a speculator. A market needs both, otherwise it cannot function. There are plenty of speculators in this market. How many?
Assume that every single barrel of oil that was produced and exported in the world was hedged daily. That's some 50 million barrels, or 50.000 contracts in the futures market(1.000 barrels each). The current daily volume in NYMEX and ICE in futures alone is abt. 700.000 contracts (including gasoline, htg oil, etc). Adjust for Sat. and Sun. and it comes to 500.000/day. That is extremely excessive vs. every conceivable hedging requirement and a good measure of just how rampant speculation is in this market, right now. And that is before we take into account the regular OTC spot oil market, listed options and other OTC derivatives. This market is hot and frothy that we should call it..cappuccino.
There are a heck of alot more dots to connect to show the full picture, but I have already taken up way too much space, for which I hope you forgive me.
Fair enough. What is the daily volume of Nymex/Ice oil futures trading, excluding all the refined/distilled products such as the the gasoline and home heating oil you mention?
I agree that speculation is certainly influencing the current market. I am just not convinced that it is either hugely significant or necessarily a bad thing.
Can you provide some simple historical data so that one might compare the current level to the year 2000? 1995?
Just the crude oil is currently abt. 570.000 contracts/day or 410.000/day adjusting for Sat. and Sun. You should not deduct the products however, since they all come from the same barrel of oil. But it is still huge, even if you do deduct them. In 2000 it was around 180.000 and in 1995 around 120.000 - both oil only and adjusted for Sat and Sun.
Rampant speculation is extremely significant in shaping prices (just remember dotcoms) and as to good or bad, it depends. Extremes such as these are never "good", in that it is never a good idea to let the tail wag the dog. Or allow Enron (and several Wall Street prop desks) to set prices for electricity in CA - if I may draw an extremely timely parallel.
It is very possible that every contract relates to a real barrel of oil. I cannot see how it could come to pass that there were more contracts than barrels. If 410000 contracts are sold per day then that translates to 410 million barrels. World oil consumption 83 million barrels so about 5 to 1. However the same contract could be easily sold 5 times in a day. This is the cause of the high trading volume. Look at share volumes.. Since the internet boom volumes have risen dramatically however the total number of shares issued in some companies hasn't changed. Furthermore, it is likely that it is because due to the very low spare capacity, oil has to be incredibly efficiently delivered around the world, this means that at any one moment one refinery might need more or less from different suppliers but overall there is very little room for mistakes, resulting in contracts changing hands on a very regular basis.
Oops sorry i'm being foolish. We are talking about futures contracts so there are 72 days worth of contracts at one time, ie 83 million * 72 = approx 6 billion barrels. If 410 million barrels worth are traded daily that is 14% of total contracts. This level of activity is required for the logistical reasons quoted above as well as speculation.
It might mean that the amount of speculation in the oil trade has increased considerably. The logical result is larger volatility. Personally I wouldn't be so surprised if oil retreats to $50 or less in some panic driven sell-off. Why not? Recent pieces of information suggest that the market is not so tight to sustain those prices (yet), especially if Iranian saga settles down (my prediction) and the scheduled projects come online (also very likely, IMO).
IMO we often forget that PO is an event measured with decades; in the meantime there is enough room for many boom & bust cycles.
You've mentioned two events that might cause oil prices to retreat, although a crash seems highly unlikely. I can think of a 100 events that could cause oil to go much higher in a very short time (terrorist attack on oil facility, bad hurricane season, Iran invasion, domestic terrorist attack, runaway inflation, etc.) It's not just the supply/demand issue (although that is compelling), it's also the fact that so much of the world's oil supply is located in politically unstable areas of the world. Unless peace breaks out all over, I don't see oil prices declining below $60.
I don't care what the crude price is I see a price floor in the STL area at maybe $2.50 and that might be low. I just don't see it ever being cheaper than that. The barrel price doesn't translate well to most people.
I think volume traded is a misleading number because the same contract can change hands many times which increases the volume while the open interest of the underlying commodity stays the same. Still, Im sure there has been an increase in paper oil and pure speculation.
Volume traded on a daily basis vs. the "real" stuff is a very good (actually the best) indicator of how much speculation vs. actual physical trade is going on. Of course each contract changes hands dozens of times, that is the nature of speculation. Just compare futures volume/physical oil in 1998 at the bottom of oil prices, to today's ratio. It is easily triple to quadruple. Speculation attracts more speculation until the whole bubble pops. Commodities are also very prone to rabid speculation and violent price moves because of leverage: margin is very, very low, typically 3-5% and sometimes alot less, if you double leverage as many hedge funds do. Just remember the mess those Nobel laureates and their bond hedge fund got into a few years back..the Fed had to bail them out. There will be no Fed bailout for commodities' speculators - of that you can be certain.
Someone further up used the total daily oil production in the ratio (84 mbpd) - that is ok if you are just comparing ratios over time, but not for just once. Exported oil volume is a much better figure to use to gauge hedging needs: eg Iran produces ca.4 mbpd but exports 2.5. The rest it uses locally, selling at prices way below market and does not need to hedge. Same goes for almost all other producers, except the US, UK, Norway and a few more.
We need to distinguish the issues of peak oil (reaching an immutable ceiling in our capacity to produce oil) and the behaviour of commodity indexes in general.
There seems no clear reason why we cannot be both at the front end of the peak oil plateau and in the midst of a speculative commodity bubble.
The China/India story has driven a general surge in commodity (energy, copper, steel, zinc &c) prices. You don't need to posit peak oil to explain that. I know several traders that think peak oil is tosh but who have made very signficant portfolio gains by buying all things physical over the last 2 - 3 years.
>O.K., let's try real hard to find the cause of this commodities boom, could it be, oh let's see....trying to bring almost two billion people from an animal/people powered society into the modern era in a decade time span? (China/India)....could it be that we came off a commodities collapse in the 1980's early 1990's, so that gold is still cheaper in adjusted inflation terms than it was in the 1970's? Could it be that investors who have gotten their clock cleaned on successive bubbles from the S&L crash (housing collapse? I remember the 1980's....I laugh at housing collapses....HA, HA, HA,:-O), to the internet "tech bubble" crash, to the Euro bubble, to....yep, you got it...someone told them to go "with the hard assets, the metals, the oils, we will always need those (true enough, but when the value of money exchanged on these items begins to wildly exceed the world value of these items, something is getting ready to happen....but, money has to go somewhere, and where to put it? You try to choose, and remember, historically it's not been such a great idea to buy items at historic highs (oil, gas, commodities are getting closer to the all time top)
Let's admit it, the commodities bubble is just that, a bubble, and it shows signs of collapsing even bigger and sooner than the housing bubble...only two wild card holds them this high and that is China/India. Most stats show that if you take these two out, the efficiency of production/use/recycling of commodities has improved in the developed world, and demand has not really risen appreciably. Energy consumption in the U.S. for example has went down, not up, as a percent of GDP...
Which brings us to this dollar thing....I am going to go out on a limb here and say the dollar is not that bad of a bet.
I know, I know, all bets are that a MASSIVE currency collapse is coming, that we will have panic in the street as even hookers and Starbucks will turn down dollars (my creditors are still accepting them, however), and the dollar will fall to nothing compared to.....(???), and there's the rub....compared to what?
Ohhh, that's right, the mighty Euro, the currency of a..."group" (??) of nations several of whom have recently renounced it's own charter....founded by a nation whom, along with it's biggest most powerful neighbor and fellow member run constantly out of complience with all the groups own memoranda of understanding on budget deficits, currency valuation, work rules and interest rates...a group with an aging demographic that is sure to be a greater burden on it's social system than even the U.S. Social Security system faces...and that is, as a percentage of GNP, a bigger importer of oil and gas than the U.S., and with it's only "internal" oil and gas supply dropping like a stone, and with a Muslim minority far greater than that of the U.S., and far more militant and directly connected to the "struggles" for Islamic and Arabic "liberation" than that in the United States.....THE EURO???? !!!!!!
BUT THE CHINESE!! They are coming after us, don't ya' know....of course, they have their own energy woes, and not only that, are driven by exports to....well, mostly us, despite attempts to diversify, because the EU does not fancy being buried in cheap Chinese plastic items after all....and the above mentioned rise in commodity prices mean those cheap plastic items are not so cheap after all....
As I sit typing this, I have the local news on TV, here in central Kentucky....where Toyota is announcing expansion of it's large modern plant in Georgetown KY to build the Camry Hybrid, where Honda is looking at Southern Indiana or Ohio to expand Civic production, and where UPS is expanding before even it's last expansion is finished to cope with increasing air freight to and from the aforementioned China. Now one assumes that Honda and Toyota, selling cars in the U.S., and China, selling everything from Christmas cards to auto and truck brakes in the U.S., fully intend to take payment in....dollars, maybe?
I look at the stock charts....I should have bought oil and gas stocks, right?
Well, only if I ignore Cummins Engine, Caterpiller, and Deere&Co, who have went anywhere from double to triple in the last 3 to 5 years, BEFORE you count dividend reinvestment....who'd a thunk it?
One more thing....try to avoid the phrase "peak everything". It is a clear violation of the terms of true "Peak" and simply makes no sense (peak aluminum? It's recycleable material, and is still cheap enough that you don't even see the homeless and poor out walking the highway to pick up cans...peak iron or steel? Demand is high yes, but Australia alone has enough to provide for a century, they just don't have enough manpower to get it out fast enough...."peak everything" makes those concerned about the real issue of peak oil or "oil and gas depletion" sound silly by association, and borders on "Chicken Little syndrome".
Folks, the depletion of oil and gas are real issues, and deserving of hard, HARD work on replanning our energy system, conservation, and applied engineering. We may need to work on getting a grip here and trying to stay a bit more on topic.
Roger Conner known to you as ThatsItImout
<Funny how you choose the only two commodities, iron and aluminium, that are still in very good supply to make your point.>
Right, as opposed to say Gold, Silver or Platinum, which of course are in short supply because no one bothers to recycle them but just throws them in the landfill...
I grew up on the poor side of the tracks where in the old days of copper plumbing, you were careful who you rented to or they would tear that out of the house and sell it for scrap....
Roger Conner known to you as ThatsItImout
You are spot on. Call a spade a spade and let the masses froth at the mouth. When prices depart vertically from facts it's time to piss against the wind. You will get wet for a while, no doubt, but soon it will be the crowd that will look for umbrellas.
Oil Fact (just one): The daily volume of oil and oil product futures traded in NYMEX and ICE (ex-IPE) alone, currently exceeds global daily oil exports by a factor of 10-to-1. When you add the spot market and the OTC derivatives the ratio gets much bigger. Last year it was 5-to-1; I don't know where the ratio was at the bottom of 1998, but I would guess alot lower. We are getting drowned in paper oil.
The game can be played from the other direction as well, of course; and it has been - oh boy has it ever...
There will be no suden rush to close position due to the finite nature of oil. I think most people here would agree that there will be no price collapse sans some unforseen catastrophic event that produces more oil.
Sincerely,
Hellasious
There is a comment further below about all the futures contracts being used for hedging and therefore their current huge volume is immaterial. That is false for two reasons:
- Hedging involves the transfer of risk: futures trading is a zero sum game. If you win, I lose. So, if you are a producer and sell 1.000 oil contracts short to hedge from its price going down someone else has to assume that risk. That someone is called a speculator. A market needs both, otherwise it cannot function. There are plenty of speculators in this market. How many?
- Assume that every single barrel of oil that was produced and exported in the world was hedged daily. That's some 50 million barrels, or 50.000 contracts in the futures market(1.000 barrels each). The current daily volume in NYMEX and ICE in futures alone is abt. 700.000 contracts (including gasoline, htg oil, etc). Adjust for Sat. and Sun. and it comes to 500.000/day. That is extremely excessive vs. every conceivable hedging requirement and a good measure of just how rampant speculation is in this market, right now. And that is before we take into account the regular OTC spot oil market, listed options and other OTC derivatives. This market is hot and frothy that we should call it..cappuccino.
There are a heck of alot more dots to connect to show the full picture, but I have already taken up way too much space, for which I hope you forgive me.I agree that speculation is certainly influencing the current market. I am just not convinced that it is either hugely significant or necessarily a bad thing.
Can you provide some simple historical data so that one might compare the current level to the year 2000? 1995?
Rampant speculation is extremely significant in shaping prices (just remember dotcoms) and as to good or bad, it depends. Extremes such as these are never "good", in that it is never a good idea to let the tail wag the dog. Or allow Enron (and several Wall Street prop desks) to set prices for electricity in CA - if I may draw an extremely timely parallel.
IMO we often forget that PO is an event measured with decades; in the meantime there is enough room for many boom & bust cycles.
Volume traded on a daily basis vs. the "real" stuff is a very good (actually the best) indicator of how much speculation vs. actual physical trade is going on. Of course each contract changes hands dozens of times, that is the nature of speculation. Just compare futures volume/physical oil in 1998 at the bottom of oil prices, to today's ratio. It is easily triple to quadruple. Speculation attracts more speculation until the whole bubble pops. Commodities are also very prone to rabid speculation and violent price moves because of leverage: margin is very, very low, typically 3-5% and sometimes alot less, if you double leverage as many hedge funds do. Just remember the mess those Nobel laureates and their bond hedge fund got into a few years back..the Fed had to bail them out. There will be no Fed bailout for commodities' speculators - of that you can be certain.
Someone further up used the total daily oil production in the ratio (84 mbpd) - that is ok if you are just comparing ratios over time, but not for just once. Exported oil volume is a much better figure to use to gauge hedging needs: eg Iran produces ca.4 mbpd but exports 2.5. The rest it uses locally, selling at prices way below market and does not need to hedge. Same goes for almost all other producers, except the US, UK, Norway and a few more.
We need to distinguish the issues of peak oil (reaching an immutable ceiling in our capacity to produce oil) and the behaviour of commodity indexes in general.
There seems no clear reason why we cannot be both at the front end of the peak oil plateau and in the midst of a speculative commodity bubble.
The China/India story has driven a general surge in commodity (energy, copper, steel, zinc &c) prices. You don't need to posit peak oil to explain that. I know several traders that think peak oil is tosh but who have made very signficant portfolio gains by buying all things physical over the last 2 - 3 years.