So who is really in control of the oil price as the market braces itself for a post-summer lull? According to Eugen Weinberg, an analyst with Commerzbank, the power lies in the hands of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission in the United States. The regulator is preparing to crack down on excessive speculation in commodities markets, and has already promised "vigorous" enforcement of trading position limits. Weinberg predicts oil prices will trade between $65-$75 per barrel after the OPEC meeting and will eventually drop to $50 by the end of the year, with a potentially rapid fall if the C.F.T.C. comes out with a crackdown that is more rigid than expected.Commodities traders may continue to act as the dominant influence in oil prices -- unless the CFTC puts a stop to their trading. I would argue that such traders have had the major influence on oil prices for some time. I believe they were more responsible for the high prices we saw prior to the financial crisis than OPEC. If the CFTC kills a large portion of the oil trading market, then the price may plummet, as the article anticipates. That is, unless OPEC decides it goes too low and decides to cut supply. And there's the trade-off. By weakening the ability of traders to speculate in oil trading, you provide greater power to OPEC. That results in a dilemma: who would you rather have the power to control the oil market -- commodities traders or OPEC? The CFTC would likely hand the power back to OPEC through stricter trading regulation. I'm not particularly convinced that's a more favorable alternative.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2009/09/is-opec-losing-its-power/24657/
