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Registered User
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Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
You aren't butting in at all. You are as entitled and welcome to participate in this thread as any of us colonials are.
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Registered User
Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
Thanks very much, just didn't want to distract from the original thread title and post too much!
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Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
Well they probably wouldn't call it the "off topic cafe" if they didn't allow for you to stray off topic now and then.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
The cheapest I ever paid for gas was 98 cents a gallon. That was in the late 90's...of course I also lived in OK at the time.
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Registered User
Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
 Originally Posted by FIREball
They would never agree to cap it, even at 4.49
i agree with fireball Its a natural resource it will keep depleting theres no way it can be at a constant price
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BPnet Veteran
Re: bill to allow feds to cap gas prices at 2.49!!!!!!
Hey guys/gals,
I watched a House of Representatives meeting last night on C-span that totally changed my view of how this whole gas thing works.
So, here's the jist of what I got: Most big banks/investment firms trade on margins. This is nothing new. Trading on margins means buying way more stocks/commodities than you currently have funds for. As long as the exchange you are buying with doesn't "margin call" (meaning you have to pony up the dough NOW) you can get away with this to some extent. They do have fees and limits on how much you can do though.
BUT....
I heard on this report how US commodities are traded on foreign markets which have little to NO regulations and NO MARGIN CALLS. Which means, provided that exchange likes you...you can call up and say "I want 3,000,000 barrels of oil" and front little to no money for it.
They pointed out that Valero Energy Corp and Goldman Sachs Investment firms are buying up TONS of oil in such a way and then announcing "Crude will hit $200 a barrel".
Yeah, with this kind of bizarre demand affecting supply it will. I don't understand how US commodities can be traded so willy nilly on foreign markets.
It would be like me buying up ALL ball pythons in the US through a European market and fronting no money for it, and driving up prices as a result.
JonV
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