First lets have some facts:

>From The (UK) Times May 22, 2008



They're wrong about oil, by George
Rip up your textbooks, the doubling of oil prices has little to do 
with China's appetite
Anatole Kaletsky 
Just as the credit crunch seemed to be passing, at least in the US, 
another and much more ominous financial crisis has broken out. The 
escalation of oil prices, which this week reached a previously 
unthinkable $130 a barrel (with predictions of $150 and $200 soon to 
come), threatens to do far more damage to the world economy than the 
credit crunch. 
Instead of just causing a brief recession, the oil and commodity boom 
threatens a prolonged period of global "stagflation", the lethal 
combination of high inflation and economic stagnation last seen in 
the world economy in the 1970s and early 1980s. This would be a 
disaster far more momentous than the repossession of a few million 
homes or collapse of a couple of banks.
Commodity inflation is far more lethal than a credit crunch for two 
reasons. It prevents central banks in advanced economies from cutting 
interest rates to keep their economies growing. Even worse, it 
encourages the governments of developing countries to turn their 
backs on global markets, resorting instead to price controls, trade 
restrictions and currency manipulations to protect their citizens 
from the rising costs of energy and food. For both these reasons, the 
boom in oil and commodity prices, if it lasts much longer, could 
reverse the globalisation process that has delivered 20 years of 
almost uninterrupted growth to America and Europe and rescued 
billions of people from extreme poverty in China, India, Brazil and 
many other countries.
That is the bad news. The good news is that the world is not as 
impotent as is often suggested in the face of this danger, since 
soaring commodity prices are not the ineluctable outcome of some 
fateful conjuncture of global economic forces, but rather the product 
of a typical financial boom-bust cycle, which could be deflated - 
especially with some help from sensible political action - as quickly 
as it built up.
The present commodity and oil boom shows all the classic symptoms of 
a financial bubble, such as Japan in the 1980s, technology stocks in 
the 1990s and, most recently, housing and mortgages in the US. But 
surely, you will say, this commodity boom is different? Surely it is 
driven by profound and lasting changes in global supply and demand: 
China's insatiable appetite for food and energy, geopolitical 
conflicts in the Middle East, the peaking of global oil reserves, 
droughts caused by global warming and so on. All these fundamental 
points are perfectly valid, but they tell us nothing about whether 
the oil price will soon jump to $200, stay at $130 or fall back to 
$60 next month.
To see that these "fundamentals" are all irrelevant, we have merely 
to ask which of them has changed in the past nine months. The answer 
is none. The oil markets didn't suddenly discover China's oil demand 
nine months ago so this cannot explain the doubling of prices since 
last August. In fact, China's "insatiable" demand growth has 
decelerated. In 2004 it was consuming an extra 0.9 million barrels a 
day; in 2007 it was consuming just an extra 0.3 mbd. In the same 
period global demand growth has slowed from 3.6 mbd to 0.7 mbd. As a 
result, the increase in global demand growth is now well below last 
year's increase of 0.8 mbd in non-Opec production, according to Mike 
Rothman, of ISI, a leading New York consulting group.
Why, then, are commodity prices still rising? The first point to note 
is that many no longer are. Rice, wheat and pork are 20 to 30 per 
cent cheaper than they were two months ago, when financial pundits 
identified Asian and African food riots as the first symptoms of a 
commodity "super-cycle" that would drive prices much higher. And the 
price of industrial commodities such as lead, zinc and nickel, 
supposedly in short supply a year ago, has now dropped by 40 to 60 
per cent. In fact, most major commodity indices would already be in a 
downtrend were it not for the dominance of oil.
But oil is the commodity that really matters and surely the latest 
jump in prices proves that demand really does exceed supply? Not at 
all. In the late stages of financial bubbles, it is quite normal for 
prices to become completely detached from economic fundamentals. 
House prices in Florida and Spain kept rising even after property 
developers built far more homes than they could possibly sell. The 
same thing happened in credit markets: mortgage securities kept 
rising even while banks created "special purpose vehicles" to acquire 
vast "inventories" of bonds for which there were no genuine buyers - 
and dozens of similar examples can be cited from the bubbles in 
internet stocks and Japan. Similarly, the International Gold Council 
reported this week that gold demand for commercial uses and 
investment fell 17 per cent in January, just as the gold price surged 
through $1,000 for the first time.
Now consider the situation today in oil markets: the Gulf, according 
to Mr Rothman, is crammed with supertankers chartered by oil-
producing governments to hold the inventories of oil they are pumping 
but cannot sell. That physical oil is in excess supply at today's 
prices does not mean that producers are somehow cheating by storing 
their oil in tankers or keeping it in the ground. All it suggests is 
that there are few buyers for physical oil cargoes at today's prices, 
but there are plenty of buyers for pieces of paper linked to the 
price of oil next month and next year. This situation is exactly 
analogous to the bubble in credit markets a year ago, where nobody 
wanted to buy sub-prime mortgage bonds, but there was plenty of 
demand for "financial derivatives" that allowed investors to bet on 
the future value of these bonds.
In short, the standard economic assumption that supply and demand 
drive prices is only a starting point for understanding financial 
markets. In boom-bust cycles, the textbook theory is not just 
slightly inaccurate but totally wrong. This is the main argument made 
by George Soros in his fascinating book on the credit crunch, The New 
Paradigm for Financial Markets, launched at an LSE lecture last 
night. In this book Mr Soros explains how financial bubbles always 
start with some genuine economic transformation - the invention of 
the internet, the deregulation of credit or the rise of China as a 
commodity consumer.
He could have added the Netherlands' emergence as a financial centre 
triggering Tulipmania or Britain's global dominance as a naval power 
before the South Sea Bubble of 1720. The trouble is that these 
initial perceptions of a new paradigm tell us nothing about how far 
financial prices will adjust in response - will Chinese demand drive 
oil prices to $50 or $100 or $1,000? 
Instead they can create a self-fulfilling momentum of rising prices 
and an inbuilt bias in the way that investors interpret the world. 
The resulting misconceptions drive market prices to a "far from 
equilibrium position" that bears almost no relation to the balance of 
underlying supply and demand.
The people who tell you that commodity prices today are driven 
by "economic fundamentals" are the same ones who said that house 
prices in Britain were rising because of land shortages. The amazing 
thing is that just months after losing hundreds of billions in the 
housing and mortgage bubbles, investors and governments around the 
world have reverted to the discredited fallacy that financial markets 
always reflect economic reality, instead of the boom-bust cycles and 
misconceptions that George Soros's book vividly describes.




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