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"Wayne.B" wrote in message
... On Sun, 11 Nov 2007 14:46:45 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: All true, but I stand by my original comment. Oil is one commodity which should be untouchable by recreational speculators. I'm talking illegal, go to jail, that sort of thing. You know I'm right. There are no "recreational speculators". Everyone who trades commodity futures is doing it for business reasons of one sort or another. You may not agree that all of their reasons are valid but the commodity futures market is absolutely essential both to the producers and consumers of any given commodity. The markets themselves help to dampen out large daily price swings by evening out supply and demand over time, and so called speculators are part of that process - just like the stock market. It would be more accurate to call them short term investors. Sorry, Wayne, but in fact, there are recreational spectators. A mutual fund investing in the oil futures market - the manager (and the fund's customers) are all recreational spectators. About a year ago, a Barron's article mentioned that on some days, players (let's use that shorter description from now on) place more trades than oil companies who are legitimately trying to hedge on behalf of their firms. However, you're right about "business reasons of one sort or another". The problem is that "one sort" hurts you and I. No matter who plays in these markets and whether they win or lose, there's someone who makes out like a bandit: The clearinghouses. |
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