Everything
Is Rigged, Continued: European Commission Raids Oil Companies in
Price-Fixing Probe
By
MATT TAIBBI
16
May, 2013
We’re
going to get into this more at a later date, but there was some
interesting late-breaking news yesterday.
According
to numerous reports, the European Commission regulators yesterday
raided
the offices of oil companies
in London, the Netherlands and Norway as part of an investigation
into possible price-rigging in the oil markets. The targeted
companies include BP, Shell and the Norweigan company Statoil. The
Guardian
explains
that officials believe that oil companies colluded to manipulate
pricing data:
The
commission said
the alleged price collusion, which may have been going on since 2002,
could have had a “huge impact” on the price of petrol at the
pumps “potentially harming final consumers”.
Lord
Oakeshott, former Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman, said the
alleged rigging of oil prices was “as serious as rigging Libor” –
which led to banks
being fined hundreds of millions of pounds.
The
inquiry also involves Platts, the world’s largest oil price
reporting agency. The concept here is very similar to both the LIBOR
scandal, which involved banks manipulating the benchmark rates for
interest rates, and to the possible rigging of interest rate swap
prices through the manipulation of ISDAfix, the benchmark rate for
those instruments, which is also the subject of a regulatory probe.
We
wrote about both of those scandals in last month’s Rolling
Stone article,
“Everything
is Rigged.”
In that piece, finance professionals talked about the potential for
manipulation in other markets that involve voluntary price reporting:
What
other markets out there carry the same potential for manipulation?
The answer to that question is far from reassuring, because the
potential is almost everywhere. From gold to gas to swaps to interest
rates, prices all over the world are dependent upon little private
cabals of cigar-chomping insiders we’re forced to trust.
“In
all the over-the-counter markets, you don’t really have pricing
except by a bunch of guys getting together,” Masters notes glumly.
That
includes the markets for gold (where prices are set by five banks in
a Libor-ish teleconferencing process that, ironically, was created in
part by N M Rothschild & Sons) and silver (whose price is set by
just three banks), as
well as benchmark rates in numerous other commodities – jet fuel,
diesel, electric power, coal, you name it.
One
analyst I spoke to for that piece talked specifically about Platts
(and another, similar price assessment company), noting that they “do
benchmarks for the entire oil market, the entire refined products
market” and “you name it” – any of these benchmarks that rely
on voluntary reporting could be manipulated.
It’s
not clear yet exactly what is alleged to have occurred, but Europeans
have long complained that retail gas prices have not seemed to match
wholesale prices. In fact, complaints that wholesale prices at gas
stations were noticeably slow to fall when wholesale prices fell
prompted the U.K.-based Office of Fair Trading last year to conduct
a cursory inquiry
into possible anti-competitive behavior in the fuel markets. Early
this year,
they announced that they hadn’t found enough evidence to warrant a
full-blown investigation. But complaints persisted.
The
story is obviously hugely significant in its own right, just as the
LIBOR story was. But both are even more unpleasant in conjunction
with each other, and the other price-fixing scandals that have
cropped up in the financial markets in the last year or two. We’ve
had other price-fixing scandals involving gas in
the U.K.
and here in the U.S., just a few weeks ago, it
came out
that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) concluded that
JPMorgan Chase used “manipulative schemes” to tinker with energy
prices in Michigan and California.
FERC
last year also recommended a massive $470 million fine against
Barclays for similar activity. (Barclays has vowed to fight the
penalty.) Deutsche Bank, meanwhile, settled with FERC for $1.7
million after the commission alleged that the German bank was
involved with manipulation in the California energy markets for
several months during 2010.
More
on all this later . . .
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