By Moming Zhou, MarketWatch
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Goldman Sachs Group, already under fire for
reaping record trading profits in the aftermath of the financial crisis,
is now fighting to defend one of its biggest sources of revenue --
commodities trading -- with regulators considering setting limits on
Wall Street speculators.
Representatives of the firm, along with those of other big investment
banks, are scheduled to appear at a series of hearings held by the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission starting Tuesday -- part of the
Obama administration's biggest move yet to clamp down on commodities
speculation, which has roiled the prices of everything from oil to corn
and wheat in recent years.
At issue for Goldman Sachs is a major exemption it enjoys from limits on trading in certain types
of agricultural commodities. Such an exemption is usually reserved for
traders classified as "hedgers," such as farmers or food producers who
depend on stable prices for their businesses.
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