How Morgan Stanley Has Raked in Billions by Manipulating the Prices of Everyday Commodities
http://www.alternet.org/books/great-american-disconnect-seven-fundamental-threats-our-democracy
The following is an excerpt from Jed Morey 's new book, The Great American Disconnect: Seven Fundamental Threats To Our Democracy (Long Island Press, 2013).
The easiest way to think about commodities is that they are things physical things that can be measured in size, quantity or volume. Fruit. Oil. Grains. Metals. Currency. All these have unique characteristics and trade against one another on commodities exchanges throughout the world.
It is a complicated system thats not for the faint of heart. Only a select few traders on Wall Street have the acumen and desire to deal in this sector, an exchange that had been efficiently regulated by the CEA since 1936. To help understand the markets, in 2008 I interviewed Michael Greenberger, an outspoken critic and former employee of the CFTC, who described these as backwater markets, but ones that recently have become as important to understand and regulate as the securities and debt markets are.
Once upon a time, commodities traders were highly specialized in their fields and their discipline was so narrow that it was largely misunderstood. Because it represented such a small portion of the vast economic market of debt and equities, it existed in the shadows of the global marketplace.
In her book "The Futures," Emily Lambert, a senior writer for Forbes, offers incredible insight that takes readers beyond the world of Eddie Murphy and Dan Akroyd in "Trading Places" and places them into the murky and misunderstood world of Chicago commodities trading. One of the more insightful anecdotes is the story of Sam Siegel and Vincent Kosuga, an unlikely duo.