Green Mtn
location: Observing the Progressive madness with considerably less amusement.
listening to: Grandchildren, the best reason for saving the future.
registered: 2004.04.03
posts: 2617
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Greenberger's testimony, mentioned within the article:
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/_files/IMGJune3Testimony0.pdfThe London-Dubai loopholeWhy do foreign energy-trading exchanges get to set up in the U.S. without having to play by U.S.
rules?
Andrew LeonardJun. 03, 2008 | Regular readers of How the World Works know that I have long been obsessed with
the fact that traders who buy and sell energy futures on the Atlanta-based
IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) operate free from government scrutiny, giving them ample
opportunity to game the system without anyone knowing better. This is the so-called Enron
loophole, a provision in the Commodity Futures Modernization Act pushed through at the last
minute by Sen. Phil Gramm in 2000.As soon as Michael Greenberger, a former director of the Division of Trading and Markets at the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission during the Clinton administration, began testifying before
the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation's hearing on "energy market
manipulation and federal enforcement regimes" on Tuesday, it became clear that he knew more
about this topic than possibly anyone else alive. So I immediately located a copy of the written
testimony he supplied to the Senate Committee laying out his position in full -- 32 pages of tight
argument ripping the CFTC to shreds as a feeble, incompetent regulatory agency fully controlled by
the industry it supposedly oversees. Greenberger makes the best case I've yet seen for
understanding how speculators have been given free rein to romp in the oil futures market. If this
is an issue upon which you would like to become more informed, Greenberger's testimony is
essential reading.One huge problem area: A growing share of the business of trading U.S. contracts for crude oil
futures on U.S. soil is conducted on U.S. computer terminals that are operated by foreign-owned
exchanges that are not required to conform to U.S. regulations. This is known as the "London-
Dubai loophole." Although ICE is based in Atlanta, it is considered by the CFTC to be a U.K. entity,
and thus falls under the regulatory supervision of the Financial Services Authority of the U.K. But
since ICE therefore does not have to report the positions that U.S.-based traders are taking on U.S.-
delivered contracts of, for example, West Texas Intermediate sweet light crude, the exchange has a
competitive advantage over regulated U.S. exchanges such as the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX). In response, observed Greenberger, NYMEX has scrambled to set up its own joint venture
with the Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME), so that it too can get a piece of that action. The joint
venture, amazingly, is considered to be under the regulatory authority of Dubai.As Greenberger explains it, if you want to be in the business of facilitating the buying and selling of
oil futures, you need to have a physical presence in the United States. And in order to do so, as a
foreign-owned exchange, all you need is for the CFTC to issue a "no action" letter that essentially
declares the CFTC won't stop you from conducting business as you please. The CFTC apparently
gives out these "no action" letters like candy.You don't have to believe that speculation is the biggest reason oil and gas prices have doubled
over the last year to agree that this is entirely untenable. Let's give Greenberger the floor:The CFTC has vigorously maintained that the U.K's FSA regulatory model is at the forefront
internationally and that it has shared meaningful market information about ICE West Texas
Intermediate trades with the CFTC. It is self evident, however, when a barrel of crude is approaching
$140 and predicted by Goldman Sachs to soon pass $200 (with attendant high prices being paid by
U.S. consumers for gasoline and heating oil) that U.S. regulators would need and want real time,
fully audited data pertaining to the critically important WTI contract; rather than data passed by ICE
from the U.S. to the FSA and then from the FSA to the CFTC in a haphazard, incomplete, and
unaudited fashion. In fact, confidence in the legitimacy of the information being shared between
the CFTC and FSA has led to the CFTC to insist on May 29 that it receive better data from the FSA
and ICE in order to probe whether there has been improper market manipulation in the crude oil
markets...It is self evidently absurd that the American public can rest secure that the CFTC found in the DME
no action letter that Dubai's regulatory scheme is comparable to that of the U.S. The fact that the
CFTC as recently as May 2007 could conclude that Dubai's regulation is in fact comparable to that
in the U.S. simply demonstrates that there is not a foreign regulator in the world who would not
satisfy the CFTC under that agency's comparability standard. In this regard, I am sure that the
American consumers will take little comfort from an explanation that they are being protected from
manipulation and excessive speculation driving up gas prices -- not by U.S. regulators -- but by
the Dubai government's oversight of trading of the U.S. delivered [West Texas Intermediate]
contract on the DME's U.S. trading terminals. I do not envy any Member of Congress explaining that
proposition to his or her constituents.And there's a lot more where that came from.http://www.salon.com/tech/htww/2008/06/03/the_london_dubai_loophole/print.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
G
Green Mtn
(view)
Greenberger's testimony, mentioned within the article:
http://commerce.senate.gov/public/_files/IMGJune3Testimony0.pdfThe London-Dubai loopholeWhy do foreign energy-trading exchanges get to set up in the U.S. without having to play by U.S.
rules?
Andrew LeonardJun. 03, 2008 | Regular readers of How the World Works know that I have long been obsessed with
the fact that traders who buy and sell energy futures on the Atlanta-based
IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) operate free from government scrutiny, giving them ample
opportunity to game the system without anyone knowing better. This is the so-called Enron
loophole, a provision in the Commodity Futures Modernization Act pushed through at the last
minute by Sen. Phil Gramm in 2000.As soon as Michael Greenberger, a former director of the Division of Trading and Markets at the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission during the Clinton administration, began testifying before
the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation's hearing on "energy market
manipulation and federal enforcement regimes" on Tuesday, it became clear that he knew more
about this topic than possibly anyone else alive. So I immediately located a copy of the written
testimony he supplied to the Senate Committee laying out his position in full -- 32 pages of tight
argument ripping the CFTC to shreds as a feeble, incompetent regulatory agency fully controlled by
the industry it supposedly oversees. Greenberger makes the best case I've yet seen for
understanding how speculators have been given free rein to romp in the oil futures market. If this
is an issue upon which you would like to become more informed, Greenberger's testimony is
essential reading.One huge problem area: A growing share of the business of trading U.S. contracts for crude oil
futures on U.S. soil is conducted on U.S. computer terminals that are operated by foreign-owned
exchanges that are not required to conform to U.S. regulations. This is known as the "London-
Dubai loophole." Although ICE is based in Atlanta, it is considered by the CFTC to be a U.K. entity,
and thus falls under the regulatory supervision of the Financial Services Authority of the U.K. But
since ICE therefore does not have to report the positions that U.S.-based traders are taking on U.S.-
delivered contracts of, for example, West Texas Intermediate sweet light crude, the exchange has a
competitive advantage over regulated U.S. exchanges such as the New York Mercantile Exchange
(NYMEX). In response, observed Greenberger, NYMEX has scrambled to set up its own joint venture
with the Dubai Mercantile Exchange (DME), so that it too can get a piece of that action. The joint
venture, amazingly, is considered to be under the regulatory authority of Dubai.As Greenberger explains it, if you want to be in the business of facilitating the buying and selling of
oil futures, you need to have a physical presence in the United States. And in order to do so, as a
foreign-owned exchange, all you need is for the CFTC to issue a "no action" letter that essentially
declares the CFTC won't stop you from conducting business as you please. The CFTC apparently
gives out these "no action" letters like candy.You don't have to believe that speculation is the biggest reason oil and gas prices have doubled
over the last year to agree that this is entirely untenable. Let's give Greenberger the floor:The CFTC has vigorously maintained that the U.K's FSA regulatory model is at the forefront
internationally and that it has shared meaningful market information about ICE West Texas
Intermediate trades with the CFTC. It is self evident, however, when a barrel of crude is approaching
$140 and predicted by Goldman Sachs to soon pass $200 (with attendant high prices being paid by
U.S. consumers for gasoline and heating oil) that U.S. regulators would need and want real time,
fully audited data pertaining to the critically important WTI contract; rather than data passed by ICE
from the U.S. to the FSA and then from the FSA to the CFTC in a haphazard, incomplete, and
unaudited fashion. In fact, confidence in the legitimacy of the information being shared between
the CFTC and FSA has led to the CFTC to insist on May 29 that it receive better data from the FSA
and ICE in order to probe whether there has been improper market manipulation in the crude oil
markets...It is self evidently absurd that the American public can rest secure that the CFTC found in the DME
no action letter that Dubai's regulatory scheme is comparable to that of the U.S. The fact that the
CFTC as recently as May 2007 could conclude that Dubai's regulation is in fact comparable to that
in the U.S. simply demonstrates that there is not a foreign regulator in the world who would not
satisfy the CFTC under that agency's comparability standard. In this regard, I am sure that the
American consumers will take little comfort from an explanation that they are being protected from
manipulation and excessive speculation driving up gas prices -- not by U.S. regulators -- but by
the Dubai government's oversight of trading of the U.S. delivered [West Texas Intermediate]
contract on the DME's U.S. trading terminals. I do not envy any Member of Congress explaining that
proposition to his or her constituents.And there's a lot more where that came from.http://www.salon.com/tech/htww/2008/06/03/the_london_dubai_loophole/print.html
–--
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
“Restriction of free thought and free speech is the most dangerous of all subversions.” Wm O. Douglas
