Because most of them don't? There are speculation and bubbles in almost all markets.amigocabal wrote:And why would not the invisible hand of market not know?
Are not oil producers motivated by profit? Does it not make sense for them to know how much oil there is left, and offer the appropriate price?
It would make sense for the producers to know their market, but it's usually not the producers who set prices at commodoties markets it's rather in the hands of the buyers. So how much do the usual buyer know of the market - not that much necessarily for a good reason, they are usually not in the oil business but rather do something with it so most of them buy their intel from the same companies. So whenever those intel companies are wrong lots of transactions happen on flawed data. Take Iranian sabre rattling as an easy to understand example. How much should empty threats be valued, really? What if they are not empty threats?
Then you have related markets, just because your market does great doesn't necessarily translate into "correct" pricing. If a commodity close to another is increasing rapidly in price its more than likely that yours increase with it, just out of sheer speculation and/or fear driven market trends.
For instance There were a couple of years with really good tea crops which predicts lower prices, but those years were bad for coffee. So tea prices went up. With hindsight one could see that tea was overpriced because of overproduction vs consumption. But since coffee prices drove things up the market was willing to pay more for tea as well.
Same thing with gold and silver nowadays.
Now for your question regarding adjusting to how much is left - doesn't really work like that either. If you were to take that argument to its conclusion it would be better as an oil producer to produce less right now so that you can wait for better prices down the line. Off course the producers do none of that, instead we have more investment in oil production than ever - because short term profit is predictibly high.
So a commodity that is "almost" running out will have pressure from the market to not increase pricing as fast as one would think - because since the price is higher than it used to it makes lot of short term business sense to produce more right now, so oil production is increased which "artificially" keeps pricing down.
Becuase of the nature of business for profit it dictates a lot of game theory situations where you can make mathematical assumptions about trends and markets etc. However that doesn't mean that people make informed desitions, at least the info is not necesarily on the commodity/market itself but rather on how for profit traders will act and react.
Depending on the exchange some has as much as 60% of all transactions are mathematical speculation based on the trend alone and nothing on the reality of the market. So the bot has "no" information but the price graf itself (its history, its actors etc).
This is not necessarily a bad thing mind you, it's just how it works.
So anyone who claims that the market is "in control" and will reach equilibrium etc are only talking about mathematical theories that are 'usually' true but have all been disproven. Yupp, it doesn't make sense. But here is the rundown, by using stuff like game theory you can 'game' the system to make a lot of profit on market speculation. Predictably so. But for each individual market you'd be wrong because there are lots of exceptions that "disprove" the rules given. This means that sometimes you are dead wrong and lose a lot of money.
As a sidenote if you play it right such losses can be sunk to someone else. For instance, through loaning money from a bank or getting a pension fund or something else to back you - if you make a big profit you get the bonus and the big salary - if you lose big you don't get the bonus but you are not stuck with losses either.
So when they claim that the market adjusts they usually rely on governements or similar to back them up.
During and after as well depending on where on the globe.madd0ct0r wrote:food riots, like were actually quite common across the world just before the great recession?amigocabal wrote:What scenarios would require martial law?
Fun stuff that relates to both the two above, markets & food riots, was during the great depression the starving masses didn't have enough money, so lots of farmers went't bankrupt because none would buy their food.
Yupp, another example of the buyer setting the prices. Starving poor people don't set prices high enough so it's better not to produce food to them. Now if the market really did adjust like people claim it would be then predicted that if those starving masses had the decensy to die off in huge numbers than the market would adjust accordingly to price & demand...
Fortunately for them the social contract was stronger back then and the gov did what it did.
Which is why you should never let markets run themselves without regulation, checks and balances.