Raymond J. Learsy is the author of the updated version Over a Barrel: Breaking Oil’s Grip on Our Future. A graduate of the Wharton School, he made his life in the fast-paced, risk-filled world of commodities trading, beginning in 1959. In 1963, he started his own firm and over twenty years expanded from the U.S. into Canada, the United Kingdom, Luxembourg, Brazil, and Pakistan, trading in an array of bulk raw materials and commodities, shipping to customers worldwide. In the 1980s, he became a private investor, and from 1982 to 1988, served as a Reagan appointee to the National Endowment for the Arts. Currently, he is a member of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars. Learsy's analysis of the international oil trade, OPEC, and its impact on the American and world economy has been featured in the National Review Online, the New York Times, the Pipeline and Gas Journal, the Huffington Post and on CNBC. He currently resides in Connecticut, and can be reached at triduane@aol.com

Author photo: Timothy Greenfield-Sanders

Blog Entries by Raymond J. Learsy

Wall Street Tells the President of the United States to Bugger Off

32 Comments | Posted December 17, 2009 | 09:21 AM (EST)


Acela Express Departs NYC Arrives DC
" 6 00 AM 8 52 AM
" 7 00 AM 9 44 AM
" 8 00 AM 10 49 AM
" 9 00 AM 11 25 AM
etc.

These were the Amtrak trains available to the three...

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Climate Change and Nuclear Energy: America's Missed Opportunity

123 Comments | Posted December 13, 2009 | 09:35 AM (EST)


With 10 percent unemployment and a government determined to stimulate economic growth and put people back to work, what better use for our stimulus programs than building a series of nuclear facilities around the country?

Billions from the stimulus pool are already being designated to accelerate the clean up of...

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When Saudi Oil Minister Calls Oil Prices 'Perfect,' Ladies Better Secure Their Handbags

16 Comments | Posted December 6, 2009 | 04:54 PM (EST)


There he goes again. Our clairvoyant and sage Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi proclaiming for all to hear that "the price is perfect," referring to the current price of oil ahead of OPEC's scheduled meeting later this month. Then, in chorus-like lockstep, other similarly inclined oil ministers of various OPEC...

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Wall Street Compensation and Accountability Gone Off The Rails

32 Comments | Posted December 2, 2009 | 06:26 AM (EST)


We are all subject to making right and wrong decisions. But in the world as most of us know it, we are held accountable for the decisions we make. What has become so grating about the financial sector is that all too often these rules do not apply. Win or...

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With Russia And China On Board Iran Can Now Be Stopped

22 Comments | Posted November 29, 2009 | 05:49 PM (EST)


In response to Iran's defiance of the International Nuclear Agency to desist its development, open its nuclear facilities to inspection and to freeze its uranium enrichment, the United Nations took a fateful step. The board of the U.N. nuclear agency voted overwhelmingly to demand that Iran stop building its newly...

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The Pope, The Arts, A Nation in Crisis

20 Comments | Posted November 23, 2009 | 06:58 AM (EST)


Never in my lifetime have I witnessed an America so filled with self-doubt. Doubt about our governing institutions, our schools, our health care, our industrial complex, our financial institutions, of who we are and who we have become. The spirit of fairness and shared destiny has descended into rancor and...

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The Key Question No One Asked About Goldman's Role In The AIG Bailout

16 Comments | Posted November 20, 2009 | 09:37 AM (EST)


A key and fundamental question was not broached during the fierce interrogation of Treasury Secretary Geithner during Thursday's hearings before Congress's Joint Economic Committee. The contentious subject at hand was the Fed and Treasury's role on the issue of the American International Group's multi-billion dollar bailout. The key question neither...

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The CFTC and Department of Energy Snore Away While the Oil Patch Makes Hay

13 Comments | Posted November 18, 2009 | 07:19 AM (EST)


Late last week the Energy Information Service-advised oil stocks surged by 1.762 million barrels, far more than expected, while the U.S. refinery processing rate sank to 79.7% -- the lowest level in more than two decades. Yet on Monday the price of oil jumped by $2.50 a barrel.

What is...

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Thank You, Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson, For Educating Us On Oil Prices

35 Comments | Posted November 13, 2009 | 11:08 AM (EST)


The oil patch mumbo jumbo continues unabated. Today, Rex Tillerson, the CEO of the nation's largest oil company, Exxon, took a minute or two to instruct us about the reasons for the current price of oil. This is the same personage who, a while back informed us, his customers,...

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The Price of Oil and the Massacre at Fort Hood

7 Comments | Posted November 8, 2009 | 12:40 PM (EST)


The relationship between the price of oil and the slaughter that took place at Fort Hood is hardly as far-fetched as it would appear. In an instructive article that was reprinted as an Op-ed in the NY Post on Saturday Nov 7, one Stephen Suleyman Schwartz, Executive Director of...

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Oil's Massive Price Distortion Militates the Reconvening of the 1970s Federal Oil Price Task Force

24 Comments | Posted November 3, 2009 | 09:16 AM (EST)


Steven Chu, our Secretary of Energy in his October 30 post on the Huffington Post "Weatherization: Saving Money by Saving Energy" focuses on the savings that can accrue to those conscious of how to reduce energy/electricity in their homes; insulation, programmable thermostats, efficient windows and the like. "I have...

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Is There a Change In the Weather at Goldman Sachs?

15 Comments | Posted October 26, 2009 | 06:24 AM (EST)


Perhaps, just perhaps, the opprobrium heaped on Goldman Sachs these many weeks and months has begun to take hold on what had been to date the tone deaf leadership and bizarre rationalizations such as that of Lord Brian Griffiths, Vice Chairman of Goldman Sachs Intl. who instructed us last week...

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Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Wall Street and the Tolling of the Bell For America's Meritocracy

65 Comments | Posted October 22, 2009 | 06:55 AM (EST)


In late 2007 and the early days of 2008 Citigroup announced they were cutting 4200 jobs. This happened shortly after Vikram Pandit, while just six weeks on the job as Citigroup's CEO, was awarded a $26.7 million stock bonus and $3 million in stock options. It also happened as the...

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Goldman Turns Into a Financial Frankenstein While the Fed Snoozes Away

64 Comments | Posted October 17, 2009 | 06:48 AM (EST)


Before the financial crisis, before Goldman was the recipient of billions of Tarp funds, before the financial collapse of September 2008 when even the viability of Goldman was put into question, before the rescue of AIG and their derivative contracts comprising $13 billions that we know about -- that were...

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Citigroup Returns to Banking by Divesting Its Oil Trading Arm

4 Comments | Posted October 12, 2009 | 09:00 AM (EST)


In what should become the template for the banking industry and Wall Street in all its manifestations, Citigroup this week disposed of its oil trading arm, Phibro, selling it lock, stock, and oil barrel to Occidental Petroleum. Along with the disposal goes the $100 mm owed its senior oil trader,...

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"Spiritual America": Censorship at Yale, and Now London?

24 Comments | Posted October 5, 2009 | 12:40 AM (EST)


Ominously, officers of London's Obscene Publications Unit of the Metropolitan Police forced the withdrawal of a naked image of actress Brooke Shields aged 10 (see truncated reproductions) from the newly opened "Pop Life" exhibition at the Tate Modern, one of the most respected museums in the world. This, after...

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Putting a Stop to Iran's Nuclear Ambitions Without Export Embargoes

26 Comments | Posted September 27, 2009 | 02:45 PM (EST)


On June 21st a Huffington Post submission ("Boycott Iran's Oil Immediatley") called for the immediate boycott of Iran's oil. It was a seemingly draconian suggestion that was met with widespread skepticism. After all, what would happen to oil markets without Iranian oil?

Well, on today CNN's State of the...

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Question for the Fed and G-20: Why Are Our Banks Running Commodity Casinos?

9 Comments | Posted September 25, 2009 | 10:29 AM (EST)


In an article in Wednesday's Financial Times, "Banks Braced For Fed's Commodities Decision," an issue was raised that has been pointedly swept under the rug by the banking community and, I'm sad to say, our government.

A plethora of banks and bank holding companies such as Goldman Sachs,...

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Tom Friedman's Take On "Wimps" and "The Cheese Eating Surrender Monkeys"

133 Comments | Posted September 22, 2009 | 07:08 AM (EST)



In his Sunday New York Times column, "Real Men Tax Gas," Thomas Friedman had admiring words commenting on the French. Drawing sharp contrast between Americans, designated as "wimps," while the French are lauded for generating some eighty percent of their electricity from "clean" nuclear power plants....

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Chairman of Gazprom Predicts $100 Oil Because of Speculation. Speculation, Really?

33 Comments | Posted September 14, 2009 | 06:49 AM (EST)


This weekend, there was Alexei Miller, Chairman of Russia's major energy company, Gazprom, predicting that the price of oil would jump to $100 a barrel because of "speculation." Now there is a man who should know what he is talking about, or certainly what he shouldn't be talking about. And...

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