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Sen. Blumenthal Wants Crack Down on Oil Speculation

The senator from Connecticut issued this press release in response to high gas prices.

U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal called on the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder to crack down on the improper speculation and manipulation of gasoline prices. 

In two different letters sent to the CFTC and Holder, Blumenthal asked for stringent and immediate enforcement of legal prohibitions that would help stop these abuses.   

In his letter to the CFTC, Blumenthal asked the agency to enforce their newly adopted position limit rule – imposing limits on the size of speculative bets that can be made by investors on future prices of gasoline. 

Last May, Blumenthal and his colleagues called for the CFTC to adopt these position limits in order to prevent market participants from manipulating prices at the expense of American consumers. 

"I am writing to urge immediate and strong enforcement of the newly adopted position limit rule to help stop increasingly rampant speculative trading reportedly driving recent rapid price increases in gasoline," Blumenthal wrote. "Speculators continue to artificially inflate the price of gas, and consumers continue to pay the price. The Commission has done the necessary work to clearly establish legal authority to enforce position limits. It should use this authority now."  

Blumenthal’s work on the improper speculation and manipulation of gasoline prices includes previous requests to the Department of Justice. On April 21, 2011, Holder announced the formation of an Oil and Gas Price Fraud Working Group to focus specifically on fraud in the energy sector by monitoring oil and gas markets for potential violations of criminal or civil laws.

The purpose of the working group was to safeguard consumers against unlawful harm. At the time, Blumenthal sent a letter to Holder maintaining that “announcing such investigations and beginning to issue subpoenas could curb some of the worst speculative activity that may well be underway at this very moment.”

However, the working group was slow to release information about its investigations or conclusions. On March 18 Blumenthal sent another letter to Holder asking that he make use of the working group that had, at the time, been in existence for almost a year.  

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