The Hormuz Crisis and the Oil Market: Spot vs. Futures – A Straightforward Classroom Explanation
źródło ↗W kolejce do triage'u — analiza pojawi się po najbliższym przebiegu (Claude Code).
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This article is an Econ 101-style refresher designed to explain what happened in the oil market on one hand and one of the more puzzling developments in the oil market on the other: Why physical (spot) oil prices have surged while futures prices have lagged behind. At first glance, the charts may look complex and demand careful attention. But once you focus on the movement of the key lines, they become remarkably straightforward and intuitive.ShareAs you may recall from basic economics (ECON 101), markets exist on a spectrum. On the far left are perfectly competitive markets—characterized by a large number of buyers and sellers, none of whom can influence prices. On the far right sits the pure monopoly or cartel, where a single seller, or a tightly coordinated group, exerts full control over supply and prices.Between these two extremes lie various forms of imperfect competition, known as oligopolies. The closer a market is to the cartel end of the spectrum, the greater the pricing power of the dominant players.The global oil market has never been perfectly competitive. It has experienced long periods of strong monopoly-like control—first under Standard Oil, then under the “Seven Sisters” consortium of major international oil companies. At other times, it has fallen under near-total government control, whether through the Soviet Union’s state monopoly, the Texas Railroad Commission, the Oklahoma Corporation Commission, or the U.S. price controls of the 1970s.OPEC, for its part, is frequently mislabeled a “cartel” by the media, even though it has never fully functioned as one…