Archive for the ‘Business’ Category

How Wall Street Drives Up Gas Prices — Ripping Us Off and Killing Jobs by Les Leopold

Friday, May 4th, 2012

 

Les Leopold / AlterNet

Next time you fill up your tank, remember that $10 to $25 is going right from your pocket to the financial sector.

May 3, 2012 |

Photo Credit: iboy_daniel on Flckr

Gasoline prices have been falling in recent weeks, but they’re still close to their five-year high after climbing steeply for three years. For every penny increase at the pump, $1.4 billion per year leaves our collective pockets, creating a drag on the sluggish “recovery.” Where does it go and what caused the price explosion at the pump?

It’s a common belief that oil prices are set on the world market by supply and demand. Less supply and/or more demand causes prices to rise. Oil is getting harder to find; OPEC is holding back supply; China and India are guzzling it up; Iran is threatening to blow it up. And regulations are getting in the way of drill, baby, drill — end of story.

But this fixation on blind market forces ignores the fact that Wall Street is financializing the commodities markets – especially oil – as it seeks new ways to pick our pockets. The same greedy swindlers who puffed up the housing bubble and then milked it dry are now hard at work doing the same with gasoline.

What is financialization and why is it coming to the oil industry?

Here’s a chilling definition provided by economist Thomas I. Palley (PDF):

Financialization is a process whereby financial markets, financial institutions, and financial elites gain greater influence over economic policy and economic outcomes…..Its principal impacts are to (1) elevate the significance of the financial sector relative to the real sector, (2) transfer income from the real sector to the financial sector, and (3) increase income inequality and contribute to wage stagnation.

In short, we’re talking about the spread and growing supremacy of financial gambling – the ability to bet on the prices of goods produced in the real economy without actually owning those goods.

The vital activities of manufacturing, resource extraction and agriculture are turned into financial instruments that can be rapidly bought and sold. More to the point, financialization allows financial gamblers to extract profits from the real economy to enrich themselves without producing any real economic value for our economy.

When markets are financialized, they offer a myriad of ways for Wall Street firms to bend or break laws to manipulate markets and haul in enormous profits. In effect, financialization extracts a hidden tax from the real economy which is then passed onto us in the form of higher prices, economic hardship and then government bailouts when it all comes crashing down.

The oil markets have become just another profitable Wall Street casino. Why? Because, as the infamous outlaw Willie Sutton said, “That’s where the money is.” Oil markets as well as other commodity markets require a certain number of speculators. Oil producers and end users go to these markets in order to lock in prices for the products they use or sell. From refiners to shippers to airlines, oil markets provide a way to obtain price certainty for a specified period of time. To make these markets function, speculators are needed to take the other side of those trades. For more than a century about 30 percent of these commodity markets involved speculators and 70 percent of the participants in terms of volume were real producers, distributors and users. That’s what a healthy commodities market looks like.

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Today in Manufacturing: Pepsi Brings Back Michael Jackson In Ads

Friday, May 4th, 2012

 

Pepsi Brings Back Michael Jackson In Ads

PepsiCo is announcing a deal with the estate of Michael Jackson to use the late pop star’s image for its new global marketing push … continue

 

From: Today in Manufacturing

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Note to CEOs: Most mergers don’t pay – Stephen Gandel

Friday, May 4th, 2012

 

CNN Money

http://finance.fortune.cnn.com/ …

Stephen Gandel

A study co-authored by economics professors Ulrike Malmendier and Enrico Moretti has found that acquisitions tend to hurt companies, especially their share price, in the long run. The study also found that cash purchases do worse than those made with stock. Both conclusions contradict popular notions.

 

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Today in Manufacturing: Union Workers Strike At Illinois Caterpillar Plant

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

 

Union Workers Strike At Illinois Caterpillar Plant

Workers with picket signs lined up outside the plant in Joliet early Tuesday, asking for better wages and health care … continue

From: Today in Manufacturing

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Liberty Street Economics: The Impact of Trade Reporting on the Interest Rate Derivatives Market

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

 

A new post has been published on Liberty Street Economics: The Impact of Trade Reporting on the Interest Rate Derivatives Market

Based on an analysis of new and detailed data on the trading activity of major dealers, this post discusses the possible costs and benefits of reporting requirements on the IRD market.

 

Zillow Home Value Forecast: Majority of Markets To Hit Bottom by Late 2012

Friday, April 27th, 2012

 

Zillow Home Value Forecast: Majority of Markets To Hit Bottom by Late 2012 (Interactive Data), Stan Humphries, April 24, 2012

Nineteen of the 30 metro areas covered by the Zillow Home Value Forecast will reach a bottom in 2012, or have already reached a bottom. Several of those are expected to see significant home value increases in the next 12 months, including the Phoenix (6.5 percent), Miami-Ft. Lauderdale (5.6 percent) and Tampa (2.5 percent) metros, according to the forecast. Twelve of the markets covered by the Zillow Home Value Forecast will experience home value declines in the next 12 months, although some of those are likely to reach a bottom in late 2012. Some metros, however, are anticipated to experience significant home value declines in the next 12 months, including the Atlanta metro, with home values falling 4.1 percent, and the Chicago metro, where values are expected to decline 3.8 percent. Nationally, the Zillow Home Value Forecast shows that home values will fall 0.4 percent over the next 12 months, with many months showing no change or slight appreciation late this year, suggesting that U.S. home values could reach a bottom in late 2012."

 

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