Shocking - Oil Companies really screwing us on the PR!
I was listening to an "Oil Exoert" today on the radio and he said that what is not being reported is that the Major Oil Companies ARE NOT PAYING $72/BBL or whatever the traded amount is that day--those sre for the spot markets and anybody that has to buy outside of those sources like the independent down the street - and the actual CONTRACTED COST from OPEC for the 5 major oil companies in the US is averaging $25/BBL! Coupling that with the 40% domestic production from existing wells at an average cost of somewhere near $8/BBL IS WHERE THE PROFITS ARE COMING FROM! Let's be realistic - this trading MUST BE REGULATED! It is not currently being done!
Look at the statement from SHRIMPY's article.....
In January 2002, oil was at $18 a barrel.
With gasoline in the United States now costing more than $3 a gallon, energy prices may be a political liability for the Bush administration. But for outside investors ? hedge funds, investment banks, mutual funds and pension funds and the like ? the resurgence in the oil market has been a golden opportunity.
"Gold prices don't go up just because jewelers need more gold, they go up because gold is an investment," said Roger Diwan, a partner with PFC Energy, a Washington-based consultant. "The same has happened to oil. "
Changes in the way oil is traded have contributed their part as well. On Nymex, oil contracts held mostly by hedge funds ? essentially private investment vehicles for the wealthy and institutions, run by traders who share the risks and rewards with their partners ? rose to more than 1 billion barrels this month, twice the amount held five years ago.
Beyond that, trading has also increased outside official exchanges, including swaps or over-the-counter trades conducted directly between, say, a bank and an airline. And that comes on top of the normal trading long conducted by oil companies, commercial oil brokers, or funds held by investment banks.
"Five years ago, our futures exchange was a small group of physical oil players," said Jeffrey Sprecher, the chief executive of Intercontinental Exchange, the Atlanta-based electronic exchange where about half of all oil futures are traded. "Now there are all sorts of new investors in trading commodity futures, much of which is backed by pension fund money. "