The entire speculative "community" is working against you
There is a limit to the amount of leverage that bankers can create on the money that they hold. If they could use unlimited leverage, it would all soon blow up. They leverage the capital that they hold.
The Glass-Steagal act separated YOUR money from the money that they can speculate with. This applies to commercial banks. The Graham-Leachy act removed this barrier and allowed the banks to speculate with your money also. 1999.
The commercial banks all have commodity trading desks. Since they now have YOUR money to speculate with, they can leverage WAY up and buy a LOT of commodities.
"He told Kroft the problem was in the commodities markets, which had been invaded by a new breed of investor.
Gilligan said these investors don’t actually take delivery of the oil. “All they do is buy the paper, and hope that they can sell it for more than they paid for it. The volatility is being driven by the huge amounts of money and the huge amounts of leverage that is going into these markets.”
About the same time, hedge fund manager Michael Masters reached the same conclusion. Masters’ expertise is in tracking the flow of investments into and out of financial markets and he noticed huge amounts of money leaving stocks for commodities and oil futures, most of it going into index funds, betting the price of oil was going to go up."
"Wall Street trading desks were following right behind them, putting money – sovereign wealth funds were putting money in the futures markets as well. So you had all these investors putting money in the futures markets. And that was driving the price up.”
27 barrels of crude were being traded for every 1 barrel of oil consumed…"
"In a five-year period, Masters said the amount of money institutional investors, hedge funds, and the big Wall Street banks had placed in the commodities markets went from $13 billion to $300 billion. "
"And Michael Masters says the U.S. Department of Energy’s own statistics show that if the markets had been working properly, the price of oil should have been going down, not up."
"“From quarter four of ’07 until the second quarter of ’08 the EIA, the Energy Information Administration, said that supply went up, worldwide supply went up. And worldwide demand went down. So you have supply going up and demand going down, which generally means the price is going down,” Masters told Kroft. “So you had the largest price increase in history during a time when actual demand was going down and actual supply was going up during the same period. "
Yes, and look what happened to the stock market in the same period.
“Most of the trading is now conducted in secret, with no public scrutiny or government oversight. Over time, the big Wall Street banks were allowed to buy and sell as many oil contracts as they wanted for their clients, circumventing regulations intended to limit speculation. And in 2000, Congress effectively deregulated the futures market,"
Understanding How Oil Is Traded
So, the banks took your money and, speculated against you. ALL the commodities speculators are buying on margin and inflating the prices. Congress has helped them out greatly.
If you have any doubt that the economy is run by a pack of thieving 8astards, here is further corroboration.
"Federal Reserve officials have been talking about operating regimes for years, and the discussion continues as the central bank struggles to reach its 2 percent inflation target, which it has missed for most of the past five years. Core consumer-price gains came in at 1.8 percent in February from a year earlier"
consumer-price gains so, we are GAINING when prices go up.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-central-banks
"The aggregate increase of the consumer price index from 2006 to 2017 was about 24 percent."
"Average home prices are now significantly higher than they were at the top of the bubble, as shown by the S&P Case-Shiller national home price index."
"The Fed was on the case, and up real home prices went rapidly again, rising over 5 percent a year on average from 2012 to 2017. Their current real level is equal to that of mid-2004, when the bubble was already well inflated, and it is far over — 28 percent over — their trend line as extended from 2000."
Home prices soar high as Federal Reserve hopes to avoid big crash | TheHill
"Central banks now own almost half of global GDP? Is this a market economy, or something else:" The article is about the current tech boom / crash. You can count on it.
Technically Speaking: Chart Of The Year? | RIA
It's Déjà vu all over again.
Is The Dot.Com Bubble Back? | RIA
More and more States are getting nervous about NOT having their gold within their borders. https://news.goldcore.com/ie/gold-bl...-repatriation/
3/14 Higher U.S. rates now threaten a post-crisis refuge for yield – Bloomberg Post crisis, my arse
3/14 New Jersey prepares to raise taxes on “almost everything” – Zero Hedge
3/14 Venezuela urged to save itself by becoming a U.S. colony – GATA That certainly comes out of left field.
3/13 Home prices are increasing twice as fast as income growth – CNBC
3/13 Quantum computers will make even “strong” passwords worthless – Mish
3/07 Leaked files show how NSA tracks other countries’ hackers – Intercept Maybe so but, the NSA got hacked.
3/14 Globalists & nationalists: who owns the future? – Bachanan While the battle it out, Mother Nature and the pole flip will make the decision.
There is a limit to the amount of leverage that bankers can create on the money that they hold. If they could use unlimited leverage, it would all soon blow up. They leverage the capital that they hold.
The Glass-Steagal act separated YOUR money from the money that they can speculate with. This applies to commercial banks. The Graham-Leachy act removed this barrier and allowed the banks to speculate with your money also. 1999.
The commercial banks all have commodity trading desks. Since they now have YOUR money to speculate with, they can leverage WAY up and buy a LOT of commodities.
"He told Kroft the problem was in the commodities markets, which had been invaded by a new breed of investor.
Gilligan said these investors don’t actually take delivery of the oil. “All they do is buy the paper, and hope that they can sell it for more than they paid for it. The volatility is being driven by the huge amounts of money and the huge amounts of leverage that is going into these markets.”
About the same time, hedge fund manager Michael Masters reached the same conclusion. Masters’ expertise is in tracking the flow of investments into and out of financial markets and he noticed huge amounts of money leaving stocks for commodities and oil futures, most of it going into index funds, betting the price of oil was going to go up."
"Wall Street trading desks were following right behind them, putting money – sovereign wealth funds were putting money in the futures markets as well. So you had all these investors putting money in the futures markets. And that was driving the price up.”
27 barrels of crude were being traded for every 1 barrel of oil consumed…"
"In a five-year period, Masters said the amount of money institutional investors, hedge funds, and the big Wall Street banks had placed in the commodities markets went from $13 billion to $300 billion. "
"And Michael Masters says the U.S. Department of Energy’s own statistics show that if the markets had been working properly, the price of oil should have been going down, not up."
"“From quarter four of ’07 until the second quarter of ’08 the EIA, the Energy Information Administration, said that supply went up, worldwide supply went up. And worldwide demand went down. So you have supply going up and demand going down, which generally means the price is going down,” Masters told Kroft. “So you had the largest price increase in history during a time when actual demand was going down and actual supply was going up during the same period. "
Yes, and look what happened to the stock market in the same period.
“Most of the trading is now conducted in secret, with no public scrutiny or government oversight. Over time, the big Wall Street banks were allowed to buy and sell as many oil contracts as they wanted for their clients, circumventing regulations intended to limit speculation. And in 2000, Congress effectively deregulated the futures market,"
Understanding How Oil Is Traded
So, the banks took your money and, speculated against you. ALL the commodities speculators are buying on margin and inflating the prices. Congress has helped them out greatly.
If you have any doubt that the economy is run by a pack of thieving 8astards, here is further corroboration.
"Federal Reserve officials have been talking about operating regimes for years, and the discussion continues as the central bank struggles to reach its 2 percent inflation target, which it has missed for most of the past five years. Core consumer-price gains came in at 1.8 percent in February from a year earlier"
consumer-price gains so, we are GAINING when prices go up.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...-central-banks
"The aggregate increase of the consumer price index from 2006 to 2017 was about 24 percent."
"Average home prices are now significantly higher than they were at the top of the bubble, as shown by the S&P Case-Shiller national home price index."
"The Fed was on the case, and up real home prices went rapidly again, rising over 5 percent a year on average from 2012 to 2017. Their current real level is equal to that of mid-2004, when the bubble was already well inflated, and it is far over — 28 percent over — their trend line as extended from 2000."
Home prices soar high as Federal Reserve hopes to avoid big crash | TheHill
"Central banks now own almost half of global GDP? Is this a market economy, or something else:" The article is about the current tech boom / crash. You can count on it.
Technically Speaking: Chart Of The Year? | RIA
It's Déjà vu all over again.
Is The Dot.Com Bubble Back? | RIA
More and more States are getting nervous about NOT having their gold within their borders. https://news.goldcore.com/ie/gold-bl...-repatriation/
3/14 Higher U.S. rates now threaten a post-crisis refuge for yield – Bloomberg Post crisis, my arse
3/14 New Jersey prepares to raise taxes on “almost everything” – Zero Hedge
3/14 Venezuela urged to save itself by becoming a U.S. colony – GATA That certainly comes out of left field.
3/13 Home prices are increasing twice as fast as income growth – CNBC
3/13 Quantum computers will make even “strong” passwords worthless – Mish
3/07 Leaked files show how NSA tracks other countries’ hackers – Intercept Maybe so but, the NSA got hacked.
3/14 Globalists & nationalists: who owns the future? – Bachanan While the battle it out, Mother Nature and the pole flip will make the decision.
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