It's people like you that beleive that bs that keep the prices up. it has nothing to do with supply and demand it is controled by the stock traders,IE money men!
Catoiler,
Okay let's consider your position to see if it makes sense. Stock traders buy a commodity, crude oil, to sell at a profit. What traders do is not magic and doesn't require a Ph. D. to understand.
Let's analyze how that works in familiar terms that all of us can understand. We'll use the example of a used car dealer. He goes to car auctions and bids on the cars or trucks he wants in order to resell them from his lot. His goal is to buy good cars as cheaply as he can because he wants to transport them back to his lot, detail and inspect them, repair anything he finds wrong with the cars, and sell them at a profit. He knows from long experience or from a Kelly Blue Book or other pricing guide in his back pocket what most popular and common used cars will bring at retail on his lot so his bidding is guided by the retail value of the car.
If this used car dealer wanted to drive up the price of used cars in his area he could pay a lot more than other bidders for the cars he bids on ... ..... but how would he sell them at a profit if he overpaid? His competitors would have purchased their inventory at lower prices and could offer them for sale, at a profit, for less than he paid for his cars. Prospective buyers shopping for a particular vehicle, a late model Dodge-Cummins for example, might stop by and inspect his trucks and try to buy one. As soon as a smart buyer realized he could buy a similar truck at another lot on the other side of town for $2500 less they would move on. He would be broke and out of business quickly.
Let's take this example one step farther. Let's assume that all the used car dealers in this city got together at a meeting and decided to drive up the price of used Dodge Rams in their city by overbidding the prices at the local auction. They do that and pay $2000 more than each truck is worth, clean them up and take them back to their lots and put price tags on them at their inflated price, $2000 above retail market value. One or two uninformed buyers might buy from them but in a day of internet websites, easy travel, pricing guides available on line, and other sources, most informed buyers would simply drive to another city to buy their late model used Dodge.
Markets for almost any commodity are large consisting of hundreds, thousands, or even millions of prospective buyers. Human nature cannot be easily influenced or changed. Buyers tend to do what is in their best interest.
The used car dealers who tried to drive up the price of used trucks in their city would fail.
It is the same with crude oil traders. If they decided to pay more for crude oil from OPEC they would soon be out of business because it is an open, competitive market. Other traders, acting in their own self interest, would buy at the world market price and sell at a profit to educated buyers who would buy at the lowest price.
Your position doesn't stand up to simple analysis.
Supply and demand rules all markets that are allowed to operate freely.