Monday, April 29, 2024
07:33 AM (GMT +5)

Go Back   CSS Forums > General > News & Articles

News & Articles Here you can share News and Articles that you consider important for the exam

Reply Share Thread: Submit Thread to Facebook Facebook     Submit Thread to Twitter Twitter     Submit Thread to Google+ Google+    
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread
  #1  
Old Saturday, October 10, 2009
Silent Spectator's Avatar
Assistant Commissioner BCS (EB)
PMS / PCS Award: Serving PMS / PCS (BS 17) officers are eligible only. - Issue reason: BPSC B-17 - 2017
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Quetta
Posts: 961
Thanks: 83
Thanked 738 Times in 421 Posts
Silent Spectator is just really niceSilent Spectator is just really niceSilent Spectator is just really niceSilent Spectator is just really niceSilent Spectator is just really nice
Post The Market works just in time!!

THE MARKET WORKS JUST IN TIME - I
By Robert P. Murphy

[This article first appeared in http://mises.org ...

The recent political controversies over record oil prices have underscored the sad truth that even nominal friends of the market don't understand how it really works.

Because they have only a superficial grasp of this complex "organism" and how it coordinates interactions among billions of Homo sapiens spread across the entire planet, they quickly denounce its operations whenever things depart from the ordinary. The market is apparently good enough to be allowed to work when things are monotonous, but (we are told by its fair-weather friends) the politicians need to take the wheel when the road gets bumpy.

In particular, what has happened is that because most commentators — even some professional economists — don't really have a good intertemporal mental construct of the market, they can't really fathom how prices would guide people to properly allocate scarce resources. These commentators then succumb to the promises of the politicians to outperform the silly ol' market economy, since the politicians have a plan. In contrast, nobody can even picture what the market does over the course of a decade, and so nobody can contrast the market's performance versus the politician's objective five-year plan.

In the present article, we'll discuss the proposed regulation of commodities futures investors. In a follow-up article, we will see the same ignorance of how markets allocate across time, in the context of opening up ANWR to drilling.

What Good Do Futures Markets Do?

It is immediately obvious that the people criticizing "speculation" as leading to oil being overpriced by 100% really have no idea how futures markets shower benefits on everyone. This isn't their fault, since very few economists could even give a story explaining why the existence of futures markets promotes "efficiency."

Very briefly, futures markets allow people today to lock in exchanges that won't occur until a future date (specified contractually). An oil futures contract, for example, is a legally binding arrangement that commits a buyer, such as a refinery, to purchase a certain amount of oil at a future date, in exchange for a locked-in futures price. The seller of the futures contract would in turn be committed to show up on the relevant day with the appropriate quantity of oil, to be handed over for money.

Futures markets thus greatly mitigate the uncertainty of prices in the future, and allow more mutual gains from trade than would be possible in the absence of futures markets. For example, suppose an airline could add another city to its destinations, but this new route would only be profitable if oil prices stayed below $90. At the same time, suppose an oil producer determines that opening up a new field would only be profitable if oil stayed above $80. Without being able to use futures contracts, these two enterprises might refrain from expansion.

But if they can exchange a futures contract when the futures price is (say) $85, then the airline can confidently add its route and the oil producer can confidently open up the new field. However much the actual (spot) price of oil deviates from this projection of $85, the futures contract (over which the airline is "long" and the oil producer is "short") will credit or debit the accounts of the two parties when it is periodically "marked to market." That's why the airline and oil producer, armed with net long or net short positions in oil futures, can now blaze ahead, indifferent to the world events causing the price of crude to bounce all over the place. The airline can focus its attention on its customers, and the oil producer can listen more carefully to its geologists rather than its economists.

Within this general context, speculators provide the valuable service of moving futures prices to more accurate levels. Speculators earn profits or suffer losses in proportion to how much they either correct or disturb market prices.

How Do Institutional Investors Help?

Even if one concedes that (profitable) speculators in their pure form perform a useful service, one might dispute the benefits of large institutional investors in oil futures. That is actually the position of Michael Masters, a hedge-fund manager who provided key testimony to Congress on the alleged distortion of oil prices. Masters said, “There is a crucial distinction between Traditional Speculators and Index Speculators: Traditional Speculators provide liquidity by both buying and selling futures. Index Speculators buy futures and then roll their positions by buying calendar spreads. They never sell. Therefore, they consume liquidity and provide zero benefit to the futures markets.”

Actually, as Masters himself knows, "Index Speculators" are net sellers whenever the futures prices rise, and are net buyers whenever they fall — so long as the rises or falls don't cause the fund managers to change their forecasts about price trends. If a fund has decided to devote, say, 1% of its total portfolio to a commodities index, then when the index goes up, so does the value of the fund. But the value of its commodities portion goes up disproportionately. If the fund managers still want only 1% exposure to commodities, during the next rebalance they will sell off some of their futures contracts. But this process itself will tend to lower futures prices, thus offsetting some of the initial rise. Therefore, the presence of large institutional investors actually acts as a brake on how quickly oil prices bounce around. It's as if the futures prices have to spike and crash through syrup.

More subtly, institutional investors provide liquidity to the futures market, which enables the commercial producers and consumers of oil to rely more heavily on futures contracts than they otherwise would. The financial analysts on CNBC and Bloomberg have been somberly explaining for months why the credit markets are in such bad shape: they are very shallow, and the prices are meaningless, because there are so few buyers. Having a deep and liquid oil futures market enhances its ability to coordinate intertemporal actions.

Banning Institutional Investors Helps No One

Even if it were true that institutional investors were driving up oil prices above their "correct" level, it still wouldn't help the average Joe to ban such investments. Speculators the world over would still dabble in oil futures and still drive up the price of oil (assuming speculators were indeed doing that in today's world). So the oil price would still be just as distorted (or not) as it is today.

However, there would be one major difference that we can count on: If certain politicians get their way and ban "speculative" investment by institutions, then the people managing Joe Sixpack's pension won't be able to shield him from skyrocketing oil prices.

Right now, motorists are getting killed at the pump, but at least they can invest in oil futures (either personally or through a professional intermediary).

Yet the government may soon heavily regulate or even ban that option for beleaguered gasoline consumers.

Conclusion

If people better understood how the market actually works, then they might stand back and watch it work its magic. But since they have only a dim perception of its mechanics, these people instead clamor for more laws giving men with guns the permission to order people around.
(To be concluded.)
__________________
I am he, whom I Love. And he whom I Love is I.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Idioms (A-Z) Argus English (Precis & Composition) 27 Friday, November 30, 2018 02:03 PM
The Top 100 Secrets of Success and the Pillars of Self-Mastery (part 1) Usman Naseer Humorous, Inspirational and General Stuff 2 Saturday, June 30, 2018 11:02 AM
Time for Everything Zirwaan Khan Humorous, Inspirational and General Stuff 0 Friday, January 18, 2008 01:27 PM
Idioms, meaning, use ! Omer English (Precis & Composition) 15 Tuesday, September 18, 2007 03:36 PM


CSS Forum on Facebook Follow CSS Forum on Twitter

Disclaimer: All messages made available as part of this discussion group (including any bulletin boards and chat rooms) and any opinions, advice, statements or other information contained in any messages posted or transmitted by any third party are the responsibility of the author of that message and not of CSSForum.com.pk (unless CSSForum.com.pk is specifically identified as the author of the message). The fact that a particular message is posted on or transmitted using this web site does not mean that CSSForum has endorsed that message in any way or verified the accuracy, completeness or usefulness of any message. We encourage visitors to the forum to report any objectionable message in site feedback. This forum is not monitored 24/7.

Sponsors: ArgusVision   vBulletin, Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.