Enron
Loophole
Closing
Enron Loophole Would Drop Oil Prices 25% - 50% Overnight
By Jon
Ponde
The way Republicans tell it, the
minute we start drilling off the coasts of
Even so, "because oil prices
are determined on the international market . any impact on average wellhead
prices is expected to be insignificant." (Source: Center for American
Progress.)
http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2008/06/offshore_drilling.html
On the other hand, Congress and
George Bush could take a step tomorrow that would create a drop in oil prices
of between 25 and 50 percent overnight, simply by closing the Enron Loophole.
This is according to testimony
before a Senate Committee two weeks ago by Michael Greenberger, the former
director of Trading & Markets for the Commodities Future Trading Commission
(CFTC), the government board that oversees commodities markets:
"Yes, overnight [closing the
Enron Loophole] will bring down the price of crude oil to get at least a 25
percent drop in the cost of oil and a corresponding drop in the cost of
gasoline. Some people estimate 50 percent."
Greenberger's testimony was brought
to light by an investigation into the Enron Loophole by Keith Olbermann on
MSNBC's "Countdown"
(Found
on Obermann's Website
(http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036677/25252591#25252591)
The Enron Loophole is the nickname
for a provision written into the Commodity Futures Modernization Act (CFMA) of
2000 that was drafted by lobbyists for Enron and inserted in the bill by then
Sen. Phil Gramm (R-Texas) that deregulated an aspect of the market Enron sought
to exploit with its "Enron On-Line" trading program, the first Internet-based
commodities transaction system. Phil Gramm is now a key economic adviser for
the John McCain campaign.
While it was a technical success,
Enron On-Line was based on a flawed business model that drained corporate
revenues - even while the company was manipulating the rates consumers paid for
electricity in
The Republicans' sudden rollout of
the campaign to lift the ban on offshore drilling is really meant to shift the
blame from Bush and the GOP to the Democrats and their opposition to offshore
drilling. To their credit, they have done a masterful job - and it has only cost
them the credibility of Florida Gov. Charlie Crist, who broke tradition in the
state and came out in favor of lifting the ban. (It also sapped whatever meager
credibility Crist's predecessor, Jeb Bush, had left. Bush opposed lifting the
ban when he was in office but came out wholeheartedly in favor of lifting it
this weekend.)
(The "Enron loophole" effectively
banned the prohibition on single-stock futures and narrow-based indices that
had been in effect since 1982 with the Shad-Johnson Accord, a jurisdictional
pact between John S.R. Shad, then chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission and Phil Johnson, then chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.)
http://www.pensitoreview.com/2008/06/22/closing-enron-loophole-would-drop-oil-prices/