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Senators Call for CFTC to Curb Abusive Oil Speculation, Impose Position Limits

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cal04 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Jul-28-11 01:31 PM
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Senators Call for CFTC to Curb Abusive Oil Speculation, Impose Position Limits
http://blumenthal.senate.gov/press/release/index.cfm?id=6E1E47EC-2302-4CA0-8022-4A31D09AFBD3

Four Senators called this week for immediate action to crack down on oil speculators through specific measures that the Commodities Futures Trading Commission has a legal duty to impose. Senators Richard Blumenthal (D-CT), Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Ron Wyden (D-OR) this week sent a letter to Chairman Gary Gensler and all five commissioners of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), calling on the CFTC to use the authority granted it under the landmark Dodd-Frank financial reform bill, which was signed into law one year ago last week. The Senators called on the CFTC to impose spot-month position limits in order to rein in gas prices that are plaguing families in Connecticut and across the country. Connecticut currently has the highest gas prices in the continental United States – higher than $4 per gallon and nearly a dollar higher than they were in July of last year.

This week, oil companies announced high profit numbers for the second quarter as gas prices remain high. Royal Dutch Shell announced net profits of $8.66 billion, close to double that of the company’s profits of $4.39 billion one year ago. Additionally, Exxon announced a 41 percent increase in their profits during the second quarter ($10.68 billion) and BP took in $5.3 billion despite the Deepwater Horizon disaster and an 11% in reduced production. BP credited high gas prices for their ability to remain profitable even with reduced production.

The Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010, also known as the Dodd-Frank Bill, outlined statutory deadlines for the CFTC to act on certain provisions regarding position limits in order to cap the number of futures contracts that one investor can hold on one commodity. The statutory deadlines passed more than six months ago.

“Especially during a fragile economic recovery, our nation cannot afford to have speculators driving up prices at the pump,” the Senators write in the letter. “The Commodity Futures Trading Commission has the authority and responsibility to restrain such speculation and protect consumers, businesses, and our economy. One highly important power is to set position limits in energy commodities, which stop one investor from buying futures contracts in amounts that cause unwarranted price increases from excessive speculation… e request that the CFTC act immediately to impose such limits, pending its enactment of a rulemaking imposing limits as required by the Dodd-Frank Act.”
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