FortunerMan wrote:Puter2 omongan seenaknya (sekali lagi, mirip banget sama toyotaman hihihi)...gpp...org lain bisa baca kok. Yg bilang Supply and Demand gak berlaku di harga minyak itu siapa kan sudah jelas
Captivated wrote:kadang2 (bhkn sering) dlm dunia dagang, hukum supply-demand ga berlaku
mis : minyak meroket gara2 rusuh di timteng, pdhl supply-nya msh jalan n demand msh normal2 aja
kadang2/sering = ga selalu. tp mmg fakta, realita yg sering ditemui di dunia dagang
yak bener, org bs baca kalo dagang itu ga selalu dipengaruhi S-D
kan ane dah jelasin tadi, pake link-nya ente juga... eh, ngeles lg? ckckckck
kirain dulu dah master...
FortunerMan wrote:Hukum ini berlaku kalau ada kompetisi yg sempurna. Contoh anda minyak? Itu jauh dari sempurna...ada OPEC, ada China...dll. Apakah industri otomotif persaingan sempurna? Nggak juga - tapi jauh lebih baik dr perdagangan minyak. Nggak ada yg nutup2in kelebihan/kekurangan Innova. Semua konsumen bisa nyobain, test drive dulu sebelum beli, spesifikasi lengkap, ulasan majalah berjibun. TAM mau ngibul nggak ada stok juga org tinggal ngintip lapangan parkir pabriknya.
eh plintat plintut pake wiki
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000s_ener ... ble_causes
ternyata eh ternyata...
In June 2008, OPEC's Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri stated that current world consumption of oil at 87 million bpd was far exceeded by the "paper market" for oil, which equals about 1.36 billion bpd, or more than 15 times the actual market demand.
In June 2008 U.S. energy secretary Samuel Bodman had said that insufficient oil production, not financial speculation, was driving rising crude prices. He said that oil production has not kept pace with growing demand. "In the absence of any additional crude supply, for every 1% of crude demand, we will expect a 20% increase in price in order to balance the market," Bodman said. This contradicts earlier statements by Iranian OPEC governor Mohammad-Ali Khatibi indicating that the oil market is saturated and that an increase in production announced by Saudi Arabia was "wrong". OPEC itself had also previously stated that the oil market was well supplied and that high prices were a result of speculation and a weak U.S. dollar.
In September 2008, a study of the oil market by Masters Capital Management was released which claimed that speculation did significantly impact the market. The study stated that over $60 billion was invested in oil during the first 6 months of 2008, helping drive the price per barrel from $95 to $147 per barrel, and that by the beginning of September, $39 billion had been withdrawn by speculators, causing prices to fall.
krn ternyata susah ngerti dunia dagang, ganti aja dah gelarnya jd MASTER PLINTAT PLINTUT
kpd master... hormat grak!
![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)