BP
accused of price manipulation
BP
is facing legal action in the
US
over charges that it tried to manipulate propane prices in
2004.
Regulators
allege its BP Products North America subsidy artificially
forced up prices by buying up huge propane stocks only to
withhold them from the market.
BP
has denied the civil charges and said it intended to defend
itself, and added that staff had been dismissed.
On
Wednesday, a former BP trader, Dennis Abbott, pleaded guilty
to manipulating the propane market.
Market
practices
The
charges against BP come as
US
consumers face increased petrol and heating oil costs caused
by a surge in global commodity prices.
The
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which regulates
the market, said the propane had been needed to fuel homes
in rural areas.
Particularly
in the north-eastern and mid-western regions of the
US
, propane is by far the main source of domestic heating -
and constitutes a growing slice of household budgets.
|
|
Market
manipulation did not occur. We are prepared to make
and to prove that case in the courts
BP
|
Investigators
allege that during February 2004 propane prices jumped more
than 40% to about 90 cents a gallon, a price that
"would not otherwise have been reached under normal
pressures of supply and demand".
They
claim that BP managed to ramp up the price by buying stocks
of propane until it controlled almost 90% of the domestic
market.
"Cornering
a commodity market is more than a threat to market
integrity," said Gregory Mocek, the CFTC's enforcement
director.
"It
is an illegal activity that could have repercussions for
commercial market participants as well as retail consumers
around this country," he added.
The
CFTC estimated that about seven million people were using
propane for heating and cooking in 2003.
BP
denial
Ronnie
Chappell, a BP spokesman, said "market manipulation did
not occur".
But
he added that following an internal investigation, the firm
found that several employees failed "to adhere to BP
policies governing trading activities" and had been
dismissed.
"We
have also taken steps to strengthen the supervision of our
trading activities," he added.
The
CFTC alleges that the market manipulation was carried out
"with the knowledge, advice and consent of senior
management" at BP Products North America.
Mr
Abbott pleaded guilty to charges that he tried to
"manipulate and corner the propane market".
The
34-year-old from
Houston
has agreed to cooperate with authorities in their
investigation and faces up to five years in jail and a fine
of up to $250,000.
Story
from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/business/5127536.stm
Published: 2006/06/29 05:26:44 GMT
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