• Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for Business Week. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. The updated paperback was released in April 2009.



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    A Blog on Russia, Energy, the Caspian and
    Beyond

    Thursday, January 8, 2009

    Not Everyone is Losing Money

    Pure traders are the only ones left standing in the crude oil speculation business now that oil prices have collapsed, sending hedge funds, college endowments and pension funds scampering. And these traders have found a new way to make solid double-digit profits. It's called betting on the contango.

    What's contango? It's when the market as a whole bets that oil prices are going to steadily rise well into the future, and traders react by buying two contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange -- say, one for the purchase of oil next month at $41.24 a barrel, and a second contract to sell it in February 2010 for the going rate of $60.22 a barrel. For those lacking a calculator, that's a cool 46% profit.

    Here's the catch -- you've got to have some place to store the crude, and such places are so filled up that traders are now renting 2-million-barrel supertankers to store their contango bets.

    I write about this as part of a story just posted on-line at Business Week.

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    posted by Steve at 3 Comments Links to this post