snip But since all of this short term micro manipulation or trading (choose your language) has been going on among consenting adults in a wholesale market inaccessible to the man in the street. It is pretty much a zero sum game, and for many years the UK regulators responsible for it ie the Financial Services Authority and its predecessor have essentially ignored it, with a light touch wholesale market regime.
If the history of commodity markets shows us anything it is that if producers can manipulate or support prices then they will, and there are many examples of which the classic cases are the 1985 tin crisis, and Yasuo Hamanakas 10 year manipulation of the copper market on behalf of Sumitomo Corporation.
When I gave evidence to the UK Parliaments Treasury Select Committee three years ago at the time of the last crude oil bubble I recommended a major transatlantic regulatory investigation into the operation of the Brent Complex and in particular in respect of the relationship between financial investors and producers, and the role of intermediaries in that relationship.
I also proposed root and branch reform of global energy market architecture, which in my view can only come from producer nations and consumer nations collectively, because intermediary turkeys will not vote for Christmas.
A Meme is Born
In the early 1990′s Goldman Sachs created a new way of investing in commodities. The Goldman Sachs Commodity Index (GSCI) enabled investment in a basket of commodities of which oil and oil products was the greatest component and the new GSCI fund invested by buying futures contracts in the relevant commodity markets which were rolled over from month to month.
The genius dash of marketing fairy dust which was sprinkled on this concept was to call investment in the fund a hedge against inflation. Investors in the fund were able to offload the perceived risk of holding dollars and instead take on the risk of holding commodities.
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