I posted something about this on 27 September after reading the story in
the Wall Street Journal.  The article in the WSJ mentioned Doug
Henwood's research without mentioning him.

http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com/2006/09/27/gas-prices-and-conspiracy-theory/


Julio Huato wrote:
Note my question mark.  I'm too ignorant of this (and all other)
market(s) to take a categorical stance on the issue.

Julio

*  *  *

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig7/stojan1.html

Is Goldman Sachs manipulating the gasoline futures market to push
prices down before the November elections?

It sure looks that way.

An article appeared this Saturday in the New York Times pointing to
some unusual trading by Goldman Sachs in the gasoline futures market.
As Raymond Keller, who spotted the article, points out, "They always
hide the good stuff in the low circulation Saturday edition."

What's Goldman doing?

Here's how the Times reports it:

   Politics and worries about oil supplies may have caused gasoline
prices to go up at the pump earlier this year, but one big investment
bank quietly helped their rapid drop in recent weeks, according to
some economists, traders and analysts.

   Goldman Sachs, which runs the largest commodity index, the
G.S.C.I., said in early August that it was reducing the index's
weighting in gasoline futures significantly. The announcement did not
make big headlines, but it has reverberated through the markets in the
weeks since and some other investors who had been betting that
gasoline would rise followed suit on their weightings.

   "They started unwinding their positions, and those other longs
also rushed to the door at the same time," said Lawrence J. Goldstein,
president of the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation. The August
announcement by Goldman Sachs caught some traders by surprise. The
firm said in early June that it planned to roll its positions in the
harbor contract into another futures contract, the reformulated
gasoline blendstock, which is replacing the harbor contract at the end
of the year because of changes to laws about gasoline additives. Later
in June, Goldman said it had rolled a third of its gasoline holdings
into the reformulated contracts but would make further announcements
as to whether the remainder would be rolled over. Then in August, the
bank said it would not roll over any more positions into gasoline and
would redistribute the weighting into other petroleum products...

   Some traders speculated that Goldman might have been concerned
about the liquidity of the reformulated contract and whether other
traders would embrace it because there were so few contracts
outstanding. The open interest, or number of futures contracts taken
out, has increased ninefold in the reformulated contract since then.

   Unleaded gasoline made up 8.72 percent of Goldman's commodity
index as of June 30, but it is just 2.3 percent now, representing a
sell-off of more than $6 billion in futures contract weighting.

A sell-off of more than $6 billion in gasoline futures contracts?
Let's put it this way, a $6 billion trade is not decided on at the
lower levels of the firm.

Keller provides some insight into the curious timing of this trade:

   President George W. Bush nominated Henry M. Paulson, Jr. to be the
74th Secretary of the Treasury on June 19, 2006. The United States
Senate unanimously confirmed Paulson to the position on June 28, 2006
and he was sworn into office on July 10, 2006. Before coming to
Treasury, Paulson was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Goldman
Sachs. So what does Goldman do just weeks after Paulson is sworn in as
Treasury Secretary? It announces a subtle move that drives down
gasoline prices, short-term. Nice move, coming just months before the
election.

Now it may be hard to swallow for some that market manipulations go
on, but they do at all levels. Penny stock promoters cook up their
schemes, and power players have their schemes. In traders jargon, it's
called painting the tape. Indeed, the Washington Post has revealed
that the government has formed something that is casually known as the
Plunge Protection Team. PPT is supposed to jump in and buy stocks when
things are unruly. Ronald Reagan formed the PPT when he signed
Executive Order 12631. It's just another way of painting the tape
(Using your tax money, or newly printed Federal Reserve dollars, of
course). Goldman is a member of the secretive PPT.

Etc. here: http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig7/stojan1.html



--

Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
Chico, CA 95929
530-898-5321
fax 530-898-5901
www.michaelperelman.wordpress.com

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