Feb. 29 Comex March silver futures first notice day
Feb. 29 Comex March copper futures first notice day
Feb. 29 Nymex March palladium futures first notice day
Last night Harvey Organ said:
"This is the first time in quite a while that gold and silver rose big time a day before first day notice. The bankers try and influence our longs not to take delivery so they generally raid. Today was different."Well, Harvey spoke too soon; it really wasn't different. The metals rallied higher yesterday, and then were smacked down in a very calculated and violent bear raid today.
I was expecting something like this, and here it is. These fellows have their backs to the wall in silver.
I have seen reports that 225 million ounces of paper silver were dumped on the Comex in less than thirty minutes.
The last time I checked there were less than 35 million ounces of silver registered with the dealers for delivery in at the Comex.
First day notice is when holders of paper futures give notice to the exchange that they intend to take delivery the silver claims they hold from the Comex warehouse. The amount of paper held is multiples of the bullion that can be delivered at current prices.
The 'tell' is the lack of a serious sell off in equities. The yawning divergence in the risk trade is hard to miss.
This notion that gold and silver are selling off because Bernanke is not going to do QE3 is ludicrous. He does not need to do QE3. The Fed is all over these markets in Operation Twist. Jim Rickards has explained this scenario many times that I have linked here.
What is the answer? Unless you are a full time experienced trader playing with 'cool money,' stop trading. This market is far too thin and given over to gimmicks for the average person to participate. It really is.
Take long term positions that suit your investment situation, and then ignore the noise that the trading desks throw out to shake people from their positions, painting pictures on the charts to shape perception.
Bernanke is still powerful, but the trends in the longer term are even more powerful.
The volatility and gaming in the markets will only get worse, as they are thinly traded and dominated by a few big trading houses that act as they choose, almost with impunity. And if a major default is coming, the volatily will go through the roof.
You have three choices. Buy, sell, or stay out of the daily trade.
And for the vast majority, the last choice is the best, especially while the markets are given over to such inefficiency and corruption. I'm sorry, but that is the way it is. And its a shame on the government, but unfortunately these days the powerful and the elite have none.
If you have the overwhelming urge to gamble with your money, take a trip to Las Vegas or Atlantic City. The food is better, the drinks are cheaper, and the games, although still stacked against you, are at least relatively honest.
And you don't have to worry about the Casino looting your accounts and safe deposit boxes to cover their own personal gambling losses.