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Liquid validity
I notice you avoided answering those 3 questions:Yup - and that speculation is what caused the price to move up. Not the consumption of oil.
At the end of the day is really what supply and demand economics are all about - consumption. People demanding and consuming a product, causing relative scarcity, causing prices to rise. If buying does not result in a reduction in supply, then there is no reason for the price to rise.
1. Who do you think were the biggest oil speculators at that time?
2. Do you think they weren't aware of Chinese consumption / non-opec production?
3. If you think they were aware, do you think that had any influence on their trade decisions?
Also - no-one has yet put forward a way to TRADE the "econ 101 supply & demand" model, yet it is clear how to trade around speculation. What practical value to a trader is it to say "supply and demand causes prices to move" when you then can't explain how to use that to actually trade off?
True, because there isn't a way for a retailer.
What do you think every IB energy analyst was doing in 2007?
Creating reports that said Chinese consumption had overtaken U.S. consumption,
and non-opec production was falling (2/3rds of global supply is non-opec).
Or do you think they told their trade desks that there was nothing unusual or significant?
Thats the point I'm making, speculation is usually motivated by a supply and demand issue.
Even if that supply and demand issue is not going to occur for many years, or is bogus,
the emergence of that possibility still motivates speculation.
I agree this isn't practical or available for a retailer.
That doesn't change the fact it is a major influence on speculative IB decisions
that retailers then follow.
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