Spikes and Shocks: The Financialisation of the Oil Market from 1980 to the Present Day/ by Angelos Gkanoutas-Leventis
Publication details: Palgrave 2017 United KingdomDescription: xiii,157p. 22cmISBN:- 9781137594600
- 332.0415
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book | Indian Institute of Management Visakhapatnam General Stacks | Non-fiction | 332.0415 GKA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 001318 |
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330.954 UMA Indian Economy Since Independence | 332 The Oxford Handbook of Banking | 332.0151955 TSA Analysis of financial time series / | 332.0415 GKA Spikes and Shocks: | 332.0424 GHO Taming the tide of capital flows : | 332.09 GOE Money changes everything : | 332.1068 SAU Financial Institutions Management |
Spikes and Shocks; Acknowledgements; Contents; List of Figures; List of Tables; 1 Introduction; Reference; Part I Conceptualising Financialisation; 2 The History of the Oil Market until the 1980s; References; 3 The Many Faces of Financialisation; 3.1 The Systemic Perspective: Regimes, Capital and Financial Geography; 3.2 The Institutional Perspective: Looking beyond the Real Production-Financial Profit Nexus; 3.3 Could the Institutional and the Systemic Approaches be Bridged?; References. 4 Finance and the Oil Market: Introducing a Comprehensive Approach to Analysing the Financialisation Process4.1 Analysing Financialisation: Financial Economy vs Real Economy, Conceptualising Performativity and the Emergence of New Financial Actors; 4.1.1 Performativity and Performative Cycles; 4.2 Analysing Financialisation: Behaviour of the Financial Actors; 4.2.1 The Behavioural Finance Approach: From the False Sense of Control to 'Mob Psychology'; 4.3 Analysing Financialisation: The Role of Technology and Regulatory Evolution; Note; References. Part II The Three Phases of Oil Financialisation5 Oil Products and Oil-Based Financial Products; References; 6 Oil Shocks as Barometers of the Financialisation Process; 6.1 Oil Shocks and Macroeconomic Performance; References; 7 The Three Phases of Oil Financialisation: Early Financialisation (1980-1999); 7.1 Macroeconomic Background; 7.2 The Oil Price Spike Effects; 7.3 Financial Dimension of Oil Markets: The Emergence of Oil Futures and Swap Investments; References; 8 The Three Phases of Oil Financialisation: Low Financialisation (1999-2002); 8.1 Macroeconomic Background. 8.2 Technology and Regulation: The Three Factors that Changed the Oil MarketReferences; 9 The Three Phases of Oil Financialisation: Advanced Financialisation (2002-2015); 9.1 Macroeconomic Background; 9.2 The 2008 Oil Price Shock and the Role of Speculative Financial Activity; 9.3 Independent Variables Shaping the Market Dynamics; 9.3.1 Drivers behind Speculation on Oil Markets; References; Part III Financialisation of Oil Market and Evolution of Oil Market's Actor Structure; 10 Financialisation of the Oil Market: The Four-Actor Structure. 10.1 The New Group of Actors on the Oil Market: Characteristics and Behaviour10.1.1 Speculative Behaviour of New Market Actors; 10.2 New Financial Market Players Transforming the Oil Market: Oil Spot Prices and Futures Prices in Focus; 10.2.1 Expectations and Behaviour of the Financial Actors; References; 11 Epilogue; References; Index.
This book proposes that price volatility and speculation in the oil market originate from a decades-long process of financialisation. The author challenges mainstream critical accounts of the market that typically invoke the notion of a global oil shortage and so-called ‘peak oil’ arguments. Instead, he argues that the development of the market has been punctuated by recurring oil price shocks. Chapters examine the evolution of the international oil market and investigate how, and to what effect, the process of financialisation has transformed the structure and dynamics of the global oil market from 1980 to the present day. In doing so, the book suggests that the process of financialisation is both the cause and the proof of a profound change in the structure of the global oil market, that has turned the triangle of producers, consumers, and mediators that characterised the oil market until the 1980s into a four-tier structure through the addition of financial actors.
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