Comment Text:
John MacKenna
66 Chandler St.
Arlington, MA 02474-8542
March 25, 2011
David Stawick
Secretary, Commodity Futures Trading Commission Three Lafayette Centre
1155 21st Street, NW
Washington, DC 20581
Dear Mr. Stawick:
Dear members of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission,
It is time for strong oversight that will protect American consumers. I heat my home with heating oil, and my cost went up about 30 percent this year. A lot of smart people say that the major cause of these rising prices is the actions of large-scale investors. We can't control them if they don't have to report their trades to you! Please put aside the interests of institutional investors and, frankly, wealthy people, and work for the ordinary American.
I support the entire agenda described below, and I beseech you to do the right thing. Serve the public!
Excessive speculation hurt the economy in 2008 and, once again, is harming the economy in 2011. According to data recently released by the Commission, speculators have raised their positions in energy markets by
64 percent compared to June 2008, bringing speculation to the highest level on record.
We need meaningful, effective speculative position limits to restore balance to commodities markets and ensure that they are connected to market fundamentals, so that they fulfill their price-discovery function properly and without distortions caused by excessive speculation. In particular, I:
• support the Commission's immediate adoption of spot-month speculative position limits; • urge the Commission to adopt effective back-month levels that will accomplish the legislative purpose of curbing excessive speculation; • urge the Commission to adopt single-month limits that are no higher than two-thirds of the all-months-combined levels; • urge the Commission immediately to adopt a position-accountability regime for the nonspot months in place of its proposed position-visibility rule; and • urge the Commission to adopt lower speculative position limits for passive, long-only traders.
Time is of the essence, and I urge you to act quickly. Our pocketbooks and the broader economy depend on it.
Sincerely,
John MacKenna
857-241-3722