Release: Sanders Introduces Oil Price Speculation Bill
Sanders Files Bill to Make Federal Regulators Check Oil Price Speculation
WASHINGTON, June 10 – As oil prices surged today to near $72 a barrel,
the highest this year, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) introduced
legislation to make federal regulators invoke emergency powers to stop
speculation.
“The last thing people need now is to be
ripped off at the gas pump because speculators on Wall Street -- some
of the same people who received the largest taxpayer bailout in U.S.
history -- are allowed to jack up oil prices through price manipulation
and outright fraud,” Sanders said. “Unfortunately, I am afraid that is
exactly what is happening right now.”
The Petroleum Marketers
Association, citing the spike in crude oil prices, said records are
being set “even as U.S. crude stocks reached their highest levels since
1990 and with U.S. demand at a 10-year low.”
Sanders said
the speculation also is driving up prices consumers pay for gasoline.
“Despite the record supply of oil and reduced demand, prices are going
up, not down. In fact, the national average price of gasoline has
jumped from $1.64 a gallon late last year to over $2.61 today.”
Sanders’ legislation would direct the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission to stop sudden or unreasonable fluctuations or unwarranted
changes in prices. It would subject bank holding companies engaged in
energy futures trading to strict position limits, and require hedge
funds trading in energy markets to register with the CFTC and make them
subject to strict speculation limits.
Sanders introduced
the bill after meeting last week with Gary Gensler, the new commission
chairman. In a May 28 letter, Sanders formally urged Gensler to “seize
this opportunity to redefine the CFTC as a strong regulator that will
do everything within its power to benefit consumers.”
Commissioner Bart Chilton yesterday endorsed Sanders’ proposal. “I
wholeheartedly agree with you that the time to act on these issues is
now, and the CFTC should aggressively utilize all available
authorities…to address these pressing issues,” Chilton wrote to Sanders.
The House of Representatives last July passed legislation similar to Sanders’ bill by an overwhelming vote of 402 to 19.
For a copy of Sanders’ bill, click here.
For a copy of Commissioner Chilton’s letter, click here.
