When will we quit letting Speculators run the planet and ruin our lives (ruin the planet and run our lives)?
REP. NANCY PELOSI (D-CA), House Minority Leader
displays her red, white and blue balls
“We have TWO OIL MEN IN THE WHITE HOUSE. The logical conclusion from that is $3.00 a gallon gasoline.
This energy bill that was passed in the course of last year was -- the policy was negotiated in private with lobbyists from the energy industry. Even the Department of Energy, the Bush administration Department of Energy, said that it would increase the price at the pump, and it did."
In a 4-27 discussion on the Jim Lehrer News Hour, the finger is pointed directly at “PURE SPECULATION.” (Can you say, “Housing Bubble”?)
TYSON SLOCUM (research director for the energy program at Public Citizen, a consumer advocacy organization.): “Well, a lot of it does have to do with problems in the speculative market where prices are set. Many people don't know that the price of oil is not set by OPEC; it is set by energy traders, a lot of whom are in New York.”
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“And that's not a responsible use of these futures markets. They need to be used for traditional hedging activities, not for wild speculation. So you've got a small group of financial players that is reaping hundreds of millions or billions of dollars in profits, and American consumers are paying the price.”
RAY SUAREZ: Well, Tyson Slocum, you heard Rayola Dougher. Oil companies are just passing on their higher costs to consumers. Is that the way the math adds up for you?
TYSON SLOCUM, Public Citizen Organization: Well, we definitely respectfully disagree. I mean, first of all, on average, it costs a company like Exxon-Mobil about $20 to produce a barrel of oil, whether that's in Nigeria, Azerbaijan, Alaska, or Texas. They're then selling that oil to the American public at $70. So they're clearing, on average, about $50 profit for a barrel of oil.
So we have to remember that it's not just the Saudi royal princes that are getting wealthy when the price of oil shoots above $70 a barrel; it's all oil producers. And a company like Exxon-Mobil is a giant producer. Exxon-Mobil alone produces more oil than the entire kingdom of Kuwait.
And then, when you look at the profits, the oil industry has been emphasizing to the general public and to lawmakers that they actually do not make that much money. They say that, on average, other industries make more.
But when you look at the rhetoric that the oil industry uses with investors and in its annual reports, they boast about their huge profit margins; they use a radically different measurement of profit when they talk to investors; they measure profits as a share of capital investment.
RAY SUAREZ: Tyson Slocum, same question. If oil inventories are at an eight-year high, why does it cost so much more to buy a gallon of gas?
TYSON SLOCUM: Well, a lot of it does have to do with problems in the speculative market where prices are set. Many people don't know that the price of oil is not set by OPEC; it is set by energy traders, a lot of whom are in New York.
RAY SUAREZ: But what are they responding to, to raise the price?
TYSON SLOCUM: Well, they're responding to pure speculation. I mean, a lot of it -- the Wall Street Journal recently reported that new players, like hedge funds and other investment vehicles, are pouring hundreds of billions of dollars and they are treating these crude oil futures markets like it's a Las Vegas casino.
And that's not a responsible use of these futures markets. They need to be used for traditional hedging activities, not for wild speculation. So you've got a small group of financial players that is reaping hundreds of millions or billions of dollars in profits, and American consumers are paying the price.
:patriot:
WHEN IS ENOUGH ENOUGH?