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oil futures




institutional oil investment chartA recent article shows the chart to the left which demonstrates the correlation between crude oil prices and the size of the passive long-only institutional investor.

This is a topic that I’ve been harping on ever since last year, as a barrel went for $135: What is really going on with the price of crude oil?

It also confirms the previous chart showing the stampede of hedge funds and other large speculators to the long side of oil. Back then I couldn’t prove what was going on but the inflation adjusted price of oil certainly looked like a bubble.

There wouldn’t be a problem of course if these powerful market participants were taking both or either sides in legitimate speculation or hedging. But there is a problem for everyone, including these same institutions, when they pile into only one side, continuously going long the crude oil futures.

According to the article:

Passive investors increased their crude-oil holdings to the equivalent of more than 600 million barrels in June, up more than 30% from the end of last year…

So what is going on? How can these behemoth institutional players treat the crude oil market like their very own ponzi scheme? Last year the effects on the world economy were devastating. Wealthy economies stalled into a recession and poor economies were thrown into chaos as staple food prices soared.

Isn’t there a regulation to prevent the manipulative “walking up” of prices in commodities? Yes, yes there is. Or more accurately there was.

Matt Taibbi’s scorching article on Goldman Sachs (GS) in the most recent edition of Rolling Stone magazine explains. There was a 1936 government regulation which had successfully stopped this type of shenanigan. In effect it did not allow large speculators to lean on any commodity market and crowd out real producers and consumers. Until 1991. That’s when Goldman Sachs’ (GS) commodities subsidiary, J. Aron, request an exemption based on the flimsiest justification.

Amazingly enough it got it. And over the years the CFTC handed out 14 other similar exemptions. Goldman and its ilk were busy with a few other schemes and it wasn’t for a while that they started to really take advantage of the loophole they had gained. What followed was nothing short of astonishing. For example:

Between 2003 and 2008, the amount of speculative money in commodities grew from $13 billion to $317 billion, an increase of 2,300 percent.

What makes this even more astonishing is that last year’s oil spike (or bubble) happened when the world was awash in oil supply and faced a drastically reduced oil demand!

…according to the US Energy Information Administration, the world oil supply rose from 85.24 million barrels a day to 85.72 million. Over the same period, world oil demand dropped from 86.82 million barrels a day to 86.07 million.

By the summer of 2008, in fact, commodities speculators had bought and stockpiled enough oil futures to fill 1.1 billion barrels of crude, which meant that speculators owned more future oil on paper than there was real, physical oil stored in all of the country’s commercial storage tanks and the Strategic Petroleum Reserve combined.

This whole bear market has been a massive lesson in the validity and value of smart government regulations. As Ritholtz counts off in his book “Bailout Nation”, over a number of years and even decades, the threads of regulation where one by one removed. As the regulatory framework deteriorated in tatters, things started to go wrong.

Of course, as you may recall, that explanation was not the one offered when we were in the thick of things last year. The old and tired theory of “Peak Oil” was on everyone’s lips and many actually believed it.

The problem with that is, in the market when something is obvious to everyone, it is obviously false. And as I’ve said before many times, while no one disputes that the supply of oil is finite, it is a non sequitur to posit that as this resource is exhausted, the price of oil will spike.

If you believe otherwise, then get into your time machine, go back to the 1800’s and corner the whale blubber market.

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The Chinese say, May you live in interesting times. This year the market started out the year with a few truly interesting backdrops. Among them a colossal trading loss that shook Société Générale to its core.

Did you know that Jerome Kerviel’s was the largest trading loss in history?

At least so far!

To provide some context about loss, here are the top 10 trading losses ever. At least, it can provide you with some perspective about yours ;-)

Notice how all, except for one, were a result of trading in derivatives? The only equity loss big enough to make it on the board was $0.8 (by Friedhelm Breuers from WestLB, Germany) which ties for the last position.

Lesson? Trading derivatives is like juggling running chainsaws which also happen to be on fire. Unless you know what you’re doing, it will get messy.

Sure, these losses look unreal but each and every one of them started out as a small loss. The only reason why they are up on the board is they were allowed to balloon into grotesque proportions. So it is with the losses of us mere mortals. If we allow our convictions to overrule our discipline, we’re headed towards the same fate.

If anything, such gigantic losses should, for once and for all, put a damper on conspiracy theories of market manipulation. After all, if someone can’t bully a market with a few billion, then the market is indeed bigger than anyone and everyone.




NameLoss $BillionInstitutionMarketYear

Jérôme Kerviel

$7.1Société GénéraleEuropean index futures2008

Brian Hunter

$6.5Amaranth AdvisorsGas futures2006

John Meriwether

$4.6Long Term Capital ManagementInterest rate and equity derivatives1998

Yasuo Hamanaka

$2.6Sumitomo CorporationCopper futures1996

Wolfgang Flöttl and Helmut Elsner

$2.5BAWAGCurrency and interest swaps2006

Robert Citron

$1.7Orange CountyInterest rate derivatives1994

Nick Leeson

$1.4Barings BankNikkei futures1995

Heinz Schimmelbusch

$1.3MetallgesellschaftOil futures1993

Toshihide Iguchi

$1.1Daiwa BankBonds1995

David Lee

$0.8Bank of MontrealNatural Gas Options2007

Source: Wikipedia

What lessons do you draw from this?

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