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The Simple Economics of Commodity Price Speculation

The Simple Economics of Commodity Price Speculation

Full Title: The Simple Economics of Commodity Price Speculation
Author(s): Christopher R. Knittel and Robert S. Pindyck
Publisher(s): MIT Center for Energy and Environmental Policy Research
Publication Date: April 1, 2013
Full Text: Download Resource
Description (excerpt):

The price of crude oil in the U.S. never exceeded $40 per barrel until mid-2004. By 2006  it reached $70, and in July 2008 it peaked at $145. By late 2008 it had plummeted to  about $30 before increasing to $110 in 2011. Are speculators at least partly to blame  for these sharp price changes? We clarify the effects of speculators on commodity  prices. We focus on crude oil, but our approach can be applied to other commodities.  We explain the meaning of “oil price speculation,” how it can occur, and how it relates  to investments in oil reserves, inventories, or derivatives (such as futures contracts).  Turning to the data, we calculate counterfactual prices that would have occurred from  1999 to 2012 in the absence of speculation. Our framework is based on a simple  and transparent model of supply and demand in the cash and storage markets for  a commodity. It lets us determine whether speculation is consistent with data on  production, consumption, inventory changes, and convenience yields given reasonable  elasticity assumptions. We show speculation had little, if any, effect on prices and  volatility.

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