But the charts you've posted are price/time charts, where the price is determined by an open outcry auction. Today was a heavy day, granted. But
124 million barrels worth of crude contracts traded on NYMEX today, with no one knows how many buyers and sellers. 10,000 buyers and sellers is
probably a conservative guess. Is that a conspiracy?
I trade commodities, and have traded both Light Sweet Crude and Gasoline futures on NYMEX for over a decade.
That trading forum is incredibly transparent and a high volume market with market makers from around the US including a lot of independent
operators.
Who are the "THEY" who mysteriously control the energy prices? It is the force of supply and demand, which may seem mystical or nefarious to you,
but it is how I make a living.
The reason for the divergence has several causes; the one I am studying this weekend is USA's serious shortage of refining capacity. basically,
Californians want gasoline, but no smelly refineries near their precious left coast. This attitude is creating a serious lopsidedness in the markets;
just like their increased electrical consumption, coupled with a refusal to build new power plants, played right into the hands of enron in the late
90's.
What I am running numbers on tonight is the fact that offshore rigs had to halt production during the recent hurricanes. But refineries in LA/TX
continued making gas, thus temporarily relaxing a general tension in supply of light sweet crude vs. demand for gas.
Now add into the mix that NEA has approved requests for loan oil from the strategic petroleum reserves in LA to 'adjust' for the downtime of
offshore operations. My take is that personally, I don't think it's enough volume to make a difference--but the announcement is supposed to make
the public think the govt. has the situation well in hand. Personally, I think the "loan" is simply a bookkeeping operation for Bush's pr.
I'm considering whether gas futures have peaked, or have one more leg up before hitting a record. I think crude may peak in the next 2 weeks.
The only "conspiracy" is the enlightened self interest of thousands of speculators like myself, trying to outguess each other and the "big boys"
and pay off the note on the swimming pool.
P.S. The big boys screw up plenty, and hand their profits to day traders at least every other week or so. If they were better at anticipating
supply/demand, there would be no need for middlemen. . .