Showing posts with label gold manipulation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold manipulation. Show all posts

18 August 2018

The Bullish Case For Gold: Indicators Suggest Gold Has Laid the Groundwork for a Substantial Rally


For those who care about gold such as myself, in the just released CFTC data for the week ended Tuesday, speculators went net short for the first time since December 2001 when gold was priced at $275 an ounce. It’s tough to find a more contrarian indicator.

Peter Boockvar


"They run all away, and cry, 'the devil take the hindmost'."

Beaumont and Fletcher, Philaster, or Love Lies a-Bleeding

The one thing that gives me pause is the current interest rate actions by the Fed. They *could* delay the rally until it becomes almost overwhelmingly inevitable.  They do tend to do that sort of thing.

Timing is primarily an issue for those who are trading with leverage and for short term profits.

The Dow/Gold ratio is now back to pre-crisis levels (chart not shown).

As compared to 2002, the 'free float' of gold is tighter now, and central banks are net buyers rather than sellers.  Physical gold may be more of an issue than normal, as opposed to the unwinding of paper positions after a multi-year price manipulation.

At this point one might 'get right and sit tight' in the usual measured way, and wait for the banquet of consequences to be served.

And finally, the gold/silver ratio is now at a recent high.   It may go a little higher, especially in the event of a currency crisis.

This suggest that IF gold rallies, then eventually silver will kick in with a vengeance and provide some outsized gains.   But if the gold rally is a result of a crisis, silver may lag, and perhaps substantially.  If it is in reaction to inflation, they get ready for a ride on the silver rocket.

I like to read Ted Butler's commentaries on silver, and he is saying much the same thing with regard to the composition of the Comex positions. 

Dave Kranzler at Investment Research Dynamics sees the gold and silver in a similarly bullish setup with some slightly different reasoning.  I like to obtain multiple perspectives from different indicators.

I am waiting for my charts to signal their move, with confirmation, and hopefully to provide a new and workable formation to gauge the extent of any reversal and breakout from this long trading range we have been in since the 'cup and handle' formed and then failed.


04 August 2018

Transparent Gold and Silver Holdings From Funds and Trusts


Gold inventories in trusts and funds declined.   Silver inventories did not.

Even as the prices of both declined.

The largest gold trust is GLD.

Gold is held by HSBC Bank plc (the “Custodian”) in their London vaults on behalf of the GLD Trust.  And temporarily in unallocated accounts managed by subcustodians and bullion banks.
The Bank of New York Mellon, as trustee of the Trust, or the Trustee, and the Custodian have entered into agreements which establish the Trust's unallocated account and the Trust's allocated account, which are described in more detail in FAQs 18 and 19. The Trust's unallocated account is principally used to facilitate the transfer of gold between Authorized Participants and the Trust in connection with the creation and redemption of Baskets (a "Basket is 100,000 shares of the Trust"). The Trust's unallocated account is also used to facilitate the transfer of gold from the Trust for the payment of the Trust's monthly expenses. The Trust's Authorized Participants are the only persons that may place orders to create and redeem Baskets and, in connection with the creation of Baskets, are solely responsible for the purchase and delivery of London Good Delivery Gold Bars.

An unallocated account is an account with a bullion dealer to which a fine weight amount of gold is credited.  The bullion dealer may also be a bank.  Transfers to an unallocated account are made by crediting the number of ounces of gold being deposited to the account and transfers from an unallocated account are made by debiting the number of ounces being withdrawn from the account.  Gold held in an unallocated account is not segregated from the bullion dealer's assets.  Thus, credits to an unallocated account represent only the bullion dealer's obligation to deliver gold and do not constitute ownership of any specific bars of gold."

SPDR GLD Shares FAQs
Only authorized participants can add or redeem from inventories by creating or redeeming baskets of unit shares.

As of the latest quarterly report for GLD, Credit Suisse, Goldman, Sachs & Co., HSBC Securities, J.P. Morgan Securities, Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets, Scotia Capital, UBS Securities, and Virtu Financial BD LLC are the only Authorized Participants.








07 July 2018

Gold and Silver Holdings of Trusts and Funds - Price Manipulation: The Thing Speaks For Itself


Dangerous leverage in the gold markets seems to be pressing the ready supply of physical gold, even prompting withdrawals and redemptions from the trust and funds on relatively small price swings, as opposed to the silver market where supply is adequate.

If there is a dislocation in the physical gold market, which some have suggested as a possible outcome, then res ipsa loquitur. 'the thing speaks for itself'. 

There should be little surprise or debate with regard to the negligence of the regulators of the markets and those engaging in price manipulation including the Fed, the SEC, and the CFTC. 

The market price manipulators have been too long free to act with near impunity, much as Bernie Madoff had been able to do before his own price manipulation scheme toppled over, with the regulators and the Banks turning a blind eye to systematic fraud.


03 December 2016

November Intraday Price Averages for Gold and Silver - Pictures In an Exhibition


"Pardon one offence, and you encourage the commission of many."

Publilius Syrus


“And the banks - hard to believe in a time when we're facing a banking crisis that many of the banks created - are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill. And they frankly own the place.”

Dick Durbin, US Senator From Illinois


"And there is a kind of an 'ok guys, you're mad, how are you going to stop me' mentality at the top."

Robert Johnson, economist



23 April 2016

Gold Deliveries on the Comex For Friday, April 22


HSBC delivered 94,500 ounces of gold bullion at 1228.70 from their house account to the market on Friday.   I wonder if their house account includes their custodial activities.

In this case the biggest takers were the house accounts at Nova and JPM, and that big 'customer' at JPM who keeps standing for gold this month.

I just like to take the occasional note of these things.

Let's see if gold bottoms here for the short term and goes back up next week.


03 April 2016

Rickards: 'Unallocated Gold Is a Euphemism for No Gold.'


I think that Rickards is correct in his judgement, and joins many others including Kyle Bass, who because of their backgrounds are much harder to ridicule and dismiss by the creatures of the bullion banks.  And in some of their more recent remarks about this, one can almost feel the desperation.  And here and there, the rats seem to be leaving the ship.

When this pyramiding of bullion and price manipulation falls apart, which history suggests that it must, there will be many angry investors demanding explanations of officials and regulators and bankers who will be shuffling from one foot to another, trying to excuse their lack of good fiduciary judgement and responsibility.

I just wonder if they will try to wait for some 'big event' to disclose this, in the hopes that fewer questions will be asked, and will be more easily dismissed.

As Rickards notes, and again I think he is right, they will 'close the gold trading window' and force settlements for cash at one price, and then reopen the price for actual bullion at a price that will climb  shockingly higher, despite a determined PR campaign by their friends in the media.

Perhaps I am wrong about this, but to me it has seemed for some time to be all too similar to the improbable sustainability of the Madoff scheme, and other such arrangements that depend on large numbers of people accepting a proposition that is dangerously misconstructed, misrepresented, and therefore mispriced in terms of risks.

"If JP Morgan leases gold from the US Treasury it does not mean that they back up a truck in Fort Knox and drive the gold away. There is no need for that. It is just a paper transaction. The gold can sit in Fort Knox. JP Morgan can take a hypothecatable title. Now once JP Morgan has the gold what they do is they sell it at times 100 to gold investors who think they have gold but what they really have is what is called unallocated gold.

Unallocated gold is a euphemism for no gold. If I call up JP Morgan and I say, 'You know I wanna buy a million dollars worth of gold,' they will say, 'Fine. Here is our contract. Send us the million dollars.' I sign the contract. I send the million dollars. They send me a confirmation and it says I own a million dollars worth of gold subject to the contract.

Well, read the fine print in the contract. What it says is your gold is unallocated which means that they do not claim to have any specific bar with a serial number or your name on it. In reality they have taken the same bar of gold and sold it to a hundred different investors.

Now that is fine if we are happy with the paper contract, but if all 100 of us show up at JP Morgan and they have only got one bar of gold, the first person may get the gold. The other 99 people, they are going get their contracts terminated. They are going to get a check for the value of gold at the close of business yesterday, but they are not going to get today's price movement or tomorrow's price movement when super spiking going up to $2,000, $3,000, $4,000 an ounce. That is when you want your gold for the price protection when everything else is falling apart. That is when you are going to discover that you do not have gold."

Read the entire interview with Jim Rickards here.

Very unlikely you say? Do you remember what happend to those who were holding their bullion in these warehouses through MF Global? And this was a relatively isolated event. A more general break in the chain of cross ownership and counterparty risks at 100 to 1 leverage would create a market dislocation that would be quite memorable.

And as a reminder, here is what Kyle Bass had to say about unallocated and hypothecated gold, even that held within a 'fractional reserve' exchange structure.


13 December 2015

Gold and Silver Daily Trading Patterns For November 2015


Does anyone see a marked daily pattern in the precious metals for the month of November?

What a surprise!


These charts are from Nick Laird at goldchartsrus.com



20 November 2015

An Essay Considering the Current Monetary Order and Gold


This message from a person in the financial business,which is included in quotations below, was shared with me by a reader who received it from a journalist for a major media outlet.  Since it was not clear if this was intended as a private communication or public statement, I will not attribute it by name.

I wanted to use the word 'modern' in the title of this, since this pronouncement below smacks of modernism. You know, the belief that all those who have come before us were ignorant primitives, and those who are not of the same received insights now lack sufficient wisdom and piety.  But since those two words combine to describe a particular and unrelated school of thought, modern monetary theory, whose adherents have already excommunicated me for my stubborn and profane disbelief, I think I will skip that and use 'current' instead of 'modern.'

I could not resist sharing this message with you because it is such a nice, compact expression of what the modern financial media thinks about gold and money. Or at least to the extent that they think about anything, and do not just read their thoughts off the teleprompter provided by the moneyed interests that sustain them.  Or what is considered 'acceptable' by the very serious people, those who are described by Larry Summers as 'insiders.'

It starts as many of these things do, with a few simple statements that seem reasonable and ordinary enough, and use a sort of formalistic style to make it seem 'scientific' and contrast our modern thought with the ignorance of prior days.
"Why do you invest in anything? Because you want to extend the duration of your surplus earnings, the sort of stuff that would have been perishable in olden times.

There are two ways to do that:
1. Share your surpluses today and run a credit exposure to the counterparty that is obliged to pay you back in the future an absolute relative rate that compensates you with respect to income lost and potential earnings made.

2. The alternative is to sell transform your surpluses into something more durable, but which maintains market risk exposure."
Ok, fair enough.  If you have an excess of some presumably perishable asset, you want to do something with it to extend its usefulness to you. Or else it ends up like the neglected lettuce left in a damp plastic package in the back of the fridge.

One way to do that is to provide its use to someone else on loan, and receive adequate compensation that may include some allowance for risk.  Or you may wish to sell it outright, and receive something more durable in return, but again with some allowance perhaps for risk.

Hard to argue with that, right?  It is perhaps a bit simplistic, narrowing down all human economic activity with regard to 'surplus wealth' as investing or saving.  One may donate that surplus to some charitable endeavor, or sacrifice it to their gods of the day for example.  Didn't we just do that with TARP, and the uncounted trillions in bank subsidies?

Or perhaps trade it for something not required but desirable nonetheless, like finely crafted jewelry for one's beloved. Investment? The commercial messages for jewelry would like us to think so, but it rarely works that way in romance except for a fleeting moment, and with a greatly diminishing effect over time.

Not all exchanges of 'surplus wealth' are for productive investments or a truly more durable asset.   What then is 'surplus?'  Anything more than food, water, and shelter?

But let's not quibble about what defines 'surplus' and just say all right for now.  But believe we when I say that people's definitions of what is 'surplus' versus necessary wealth can vary widely, especially in these days of elephantine greed.

That definition of 'surplus' is important because it is so subjective, and yet is later used in this modern theory as a high falutin' accounting entity, the equivalence of all monetary valuation.  But it sounds so 'scientific.'  Is what we spend on food and shelter necessary and all else 'surplus?'  How about healthcare?  Cars and electric lighting?  Things that support knowledge like books?  Would there be a common consensus on what the definition of surplus represents, from let's say between Dorothy Day and Donald Trump?

Let us bookmark that thought and move on.
"Gold was an obvious choice because you could keep it under your bed and it wouldn't depreciate in form ."
Ok, that is a bit snarky, since I do not believe there is a long history of people hiding their gold, or any other large amounts of their durable wealth,  cavalierly 'under the bed.'  But it does serve the modern polemicist who seeks to disparage a choice they do not favor as uninformed, primitive, and naive.

Let's just say that for one of the alternative uses for 'surplus' wealth which is 'savings,' some durable, compact assets were found to be very useful. And that they were stored safely in some appropriate manner, since everyone who was born before our time was not necessarily a complete fool or incompetent naif.

We need to distinguish I think between what is asset barter and what is actual money at some point.  I would like to think that describing the difference is achievable.  For example, we might apply some criteria that suggests that a widespread, highly organized society might be more applicable to our thinking than an isolated island people who have no means of mining or access to precious metals and little access to widespread consensus.

As I recall the first formal coins made for widespread use were gold, silver, or an alloy of gold and silver that started showing up around 600 BC in the eastern Mediterranean. You know, that place where trading cultures that sailed from place to place flourished. Although it is known that gold and silver and certain precious and semi-precious stones were recognized as having great value, as shown by artifacts found as early at the 5th millennium BC in the graves of Varna man.

The point here is that it was not just 'gold' that was considered a durable asset.  Silver was valued as well as a few other things from time to time. They all tended to have similar characteristics.  But at some point the precious metals passed from 'grave artifact' to widely accepted 'coinage' and were used for widespread, diverse trade across governing bodies in addition to asset barter.  And I would not discount barter, which may also be called the black market, as a continuing alternative which may be more viable even now than most theorists will allow.

So why not just trade with rocks and put them under one's bed?  Granite and marble are very durable.

Yes the asset must be durable in that it does not spoil or rot or rust away.  It has to be enduring with regard to time.  But there has to be enough of the durable asset to function as more than ornamentation for a few of the finest people.  It must be malleable enough to be systematized into some uniformity of size and purity so that it can be easily weighed and measured and exchanged to facilitate trade without introducing excessive transactional friction.

And so we notice that the author has ignored one key point: manageable scarcity.  What facilitated that transition of precious metals from grave artifact to money?  I would suggest that it was a manageable scarcity combined with social organization and broad consensus that set standards on purity and form.  It was both a natural and social agreement that was widespread and acceptable enough to be effective.  And that manageable scarcity had to be as reliable as the durability of the material.  The scarcity was not expected to be wildly unpredictable and certainly not discretionary by some ruler over time.

So we will not use common rocks because they are not scarce, and not particularly portable.  There has to be a natural scarcity, to make that durable item 'special.'  But there does have to be enough of it so that it can be widely used by more than just a few of the top people.

Moving along.
"Gold is only worth the total surplus of the nation.  When surpluses are running high there's a lot of spare capacity in the system. Gold will be easily swapped into almost anything."
This is of course where we start to smell a reductio ad absurdam and the authority of the modern equivalent of a burning bush.   Let's read on a bit and see where this is going.
If there's a deficit of stuff, neither gold nor money guarantee you access to current output. 
Yes, is there is a deficit of highly desirable 'stuff' any money and not just gold will guarantee you access to it. Unless it is backed by some hairy knuckled fellows holding weapons, in which case they do not even need to bother with the facade of money.   In the strict sense of the word only your own death is guaranteed.  And maybe the recurrence of whacky theories designed to separate the common people of their rights and wealth.

But assuming that a market still exists, which presumes the dynamic of supply, demand, and price,  and a willingness of participation, then the 'prices' or the exchange value of money of whatever form will rise to meet whatever the holders of that highly desirable item may be.  If there is no market, and the item is highly desirable enough, they may be robbed of it, and they have been, but that is besides the point.

I think this may be the point where someone who was writing this has had a recollection of Adam Smith and is distorting the things which he has said to justify some modern theory.  As if Adam Smith was a received source of truth when it suits their purposes, or so they think.

One of the few advantages of not belonging to a 'school of economic thought' is that you are not compelled to carry its baggage, pro or con.  And believe me when I say that in economics there is more baggage, and much of it having nothing to do with economics and everything to do with politics and a pursuit of position and advantage, than on a Kardashian vacation.  While people say 'money is power,' it might be more correct to day that for some types of people power is everything, and money is just a means to it.

There is no shame in misconstruing Adam Smith's thought.  Some of our finest economic minds may have done it from time to time, despite an otherwise admirable record for the most part.  Nobel prize winner Paul Krugman did it in spades not all that long ago by misconstruing things that Adam Smith 'said' about gold.

What Adam Smith was actually addressing in the paraphrased thought was the non-productive hoarding of 'money' while placing greater emphasis on widespread economic transactions, the 'organic real economy' if you will as opposed to the financialized economy.  And he did favor the flexible expansion of money, as typified in fractional banking it seems, as long as it was in response to a legitimate increase in real activity that produced things.

I do think that Smith would have been dismayed though by the actions of the monetarists who believe that one can create the vigor of a wealthy economy by merely expanding the money supply, in QE for example, and doing nothing else in conjunction with it.  I have previously described that as 'cargo cult economics.'   If big plane of real economic activity brings nice things, we can get more nice things by building some things that look like the big plane of real activity out of paper and sticks.

I wonder at what point the money masters will admit that QE is counter-productive rubbish?  Don't hold your breath.  People of privilege will never let go of what gives them advantages willingly.

I like Adam Smith.  I recall visiting his grave once in Edinburgh.  And he was therefore just a man, whose ideas must be considered as his and of his time and experiences.  I do not hold any dictates of dead economists as sacred, and their 'laws' are all too often opinions and observations written in sand.

Paul Krugman Does Some Injustice to the Thoughts of Adam Smith On Money, Gold, and Silver

Adam Smith was no economist.  He was a 'moral philosopher.'  And many of our modern financial shamans have tried to take the moral considerations completely out of economics, in their vain quest to turn it into a pseudo-science of equations and a priori pronouncements from the god of the market that dictates policy as if it were an oracle, or a black box.

But I digress.  Let us move on.
"Money [fiat money] will hold its value better because in an inflationary period it can't be mined."
There it is. The modernist 'money shot.'  And delivered with a straight face.

There is a lot of nonsense wrapped up in this, combined with a leap of faithlessness to the facts.  Let's just take supply, demand, and price and throw them out the window, along with geology and any sense of the current reality.

Firstly, one of the enduring attractions of gold, and to a slightly lesser extent silver, is that they cannot be created by human means.  They exist on and in this world at least in what can be described as a natural scarcity relative to other things.

I cannot speak to the specific numbers, but it is my understanding given the current state of reality that one does not add to the supply of gold via actual mining without effort and delays.  And I think if we keep distorting the markets and driving the mining companies into red ink we will obtain a serious object lesson in this.

Mining takes time and effort, implying 'costs' and 'risks.'  Yes, the supply of gold and silver may be increased, but it takes money, luck and hard work.  And the pricing of the market adjusts to supply and demand with valuation dynamically as it does all commodities.  And gold and silver are commodities as well as 'money.'  More gold is not mined unless it is a profitable venture in a market economy.

But to contrast gold with fiat paper money and say gold is more easily expansible is a real howler.  Has the author looked at the Fed's Balance Sheet lately?  How much time and effort did that take?

Yes gold and silver can be mined.  There is also the recovery of scrap which, like real physical mining, is more difficult and costly to do than just creating fiat money out of thin air, electronic digits.  We have thousands of years of experience with mining and scrap recovery. How much and what type of experience do we really have with purely fiat money tied to no external standard or limiting factor including transparent exposure to public scrutiny?

Unfortunately it is true that the Western gold supply these days is increasingly 'synthetic' in that the financiers are expanding this supply through selling and reselling claims on the same bullion with leverage.  But this is not real gold or silver but paper claims to it.  They are non-transparently mining the stores of gold in central banks and funds and unallocated supplies and multiplying it on paper in a web of non-transparent counter-party risks.
"Money on the other hand can be withdrawn from supply and ratioed up."
Ok, there is the real heart of the matter. This is where the rubber of financial engineering hits the road to power.

Gold can be 'mined' and therefore it is no good, but 'money' can be manipulated quite easily, both up and down.

But now we get into a stickier subject of a 'gold standard,' of gold and silver as formal money.  As you may recall I am making the case for gold and silver as private stores of wealth, against what are some fairly narrow and nonsensical arguments.  The reasons for this will be provided later.

Our experience with a gold standard and its uses are historically knowable.  Which of course the author completely ignores.  Gold and silver are physical units of measure by purity and weight.  They act as a 'brake' on money supply of sorts.

If one wishes to expand their money supply against a gold standard, are they stuck?  Not happening?  No, they alter the valuation of their particular currency against gold, which is the 'universal money' especially with regard to trade amongst diverse currency regimes.  This is what Roosevelt did in 1933.

What makes this particularly unattractive to the modernist is that it requires a transparent and conscious act which the people can see for themselves.

Since 1971 the world has substituted the US dollar as the 'gold of universal reference,' the reserve currency.   This was the replacement of the 1944 Bretton Woods agreement, which tied the US dollar to gold directly, with what some have called 'Bretton Woods II.'

The Federal Reserve of the US has quite a bit of latitude with regard to the expansion of that US dollar supply AND the distribution and use of that creation through its member banks.  And that is power, real power.

And people who have that kind of power do not give it up easily.  Theoretically in the hands of philosopher princes a purely fiat monetary system can 'work' like a gold standard.  Greenspan said it could 'emulate it.'  And by that he implies restraint and rigor and transparency tied close not to economic models and the whims of power but to real economic activity. And then he betrayed this principle himself.

In every case of recorded history the financiers have stretched and strained against any and all regulatory restraints, and abused their power to create money.  Even for Adam Smith this was already a recognized phenomenon in 1776 when he published Wealth of Nations.  How could it not be with the memory from 1716 of fellow Scotsman John Law and his Banque Générale and the enormous wreckage it caused in continental Europe still fresh in his mind?
"When the people of any particular country have such confidence in the fortune, probity, and prudence of a particular banker, as to believe that he is always ready to pay upon demand such of his promissory notes as are likely to be at any time presented to him; those notes come to have the same currency as gold and silver money, from the confidence that such money can at any time be had for them...

The commerce and industry of the country, however, it must be acknowledged, though they may be somewhat augmented, cannot be altogether so secure, when they are thus, as it were, suspended upon the Daedalian wings of paper money, as when they travel about upon the solid ground of gold and silver."

Adam Smith, Wealth of Nations
But I would like to stop here and see if there are any real objections to what I have said in your mind. Think about it. Gold and silver are stores of value of wealth and, with the proper attention to form and purity, have functioned as a store of wealth, and of money at times, both widely and throughout record history in industrialized and organized societies.

Let us trudge on to the end of this.
"Gold is a volatile asset because it is only ever worth what anyone is currently prepared to pay for it. Since it has little consumption utility, the value is mostly maintained by the mass cornering effect of goldbugs who refuse to sell under any circumstances."
Gold and silver are not particularly volatile.  In their synthetic form, which is leveraged and hypothecated representations of bullion, they are volatile and encumbered with counterparty risks.  There are some who think that the current price manipulation in certain markets is intentionally volatile, for all the reasons that the recent rigging in so many other markets has occurred, and for years.

And that last sentence about gold bugs is just fatuous.  Who holds the greatest concentration of the world's gold?  Those ravening lunatics, the central banks.

One of the characteristics of 'money' versus asset barter is that money ought not to have much consumptive value in addition to its durability and nominal stability.  Have you ever tried to eat dollar bills?   People have used paper money to heat their houses.  But it is not very good at it.

What is particularly volatile now are the financial and international monetary markets, because the 'Bretton Woods II' monetary regime based on the US dollar as purely discretionary reference asset for international trade is falling apart, as theories such as Triffin's Dilemma have suggest that any fiat reserve currency would do.
"The use of a national currency, such as the U.S. dollar, as global reserve currency leads to tension between its national and global monetary policy. This is reflected in fundamental imbalances in the balance of payments, specifically the current account, as some goals require an outflow of dollars [Eurodollars, a component of M3] from the United States, while others require an overall inflow."
When considering who the stronger dollar benefits, would you be surprised to learn that it is primarily the dollar based financial sector?

I think the current volatility may continue for some time due to an historical event that so few really remark upon or even understand fully:  the unraveling of Bretton Woods II, and its slow replacement with something else.  But that begs the question of cause and effect.  It is not gold that is changing.  It is as it always is.  And so is silver.  It is the context in which they exist that is changing.

Valuations are wildly swinging in certain markets because of the mass creation of 'synthetic gold' that, with the effects of Gresham's Law, has caused real physical bullion underlying it to flow in increasing amounts to the centers of real wealth creation.   The 'synthetic gold' remains in the vaults of the West, and the real gold is accumulating in the vaults and strong hands of the East.

I am not proposing a return to the gold or silver standards.  As I have said previously, the existing financial system, and the political process it has corrupted, is in dire need first of rigorous reform. Our system is capable of corrupting almost any monetary changes that are introduced, including a gold standard.

Addressing a final assertion, we can stipulate that valuation of most things, and even people, can be purely arbitrary if such a valuation is enforced with sufficient, draconian power.  Some of the most notorious tyrants of the twentieth century have not only believed this, but have embraced and used it to inflict widespread suffering and death on their people.

What I would like is government to keep their noses out of precious metal pricing, so it may reach an equilibrium that is at least mildly sustainable in the face of massive flows of bullion into Asia. And to start reforming the financial system which quite frankly has slid off the rails several times already and looks perfectly capable of doing it again.  Our philosopher kings have feet of clay.  What a surprise.

But since the banking elite are living a lie, that the precious metals are not a currency even though they treat them as such, hold them as such, and interfere with their pricing relative to other currencies as such, it may take some time for that to unfold.

These poorly thought, often contrived, and politically motivated policies that serve special interests are the sort of things that plunge a country into endless wars, a proliferation of unproductive spending for anti-human purposes, increasing repression, and a financial culture of systemic fraud that over time drains the real economy of all of its vitality.

But what is power, if the powerful and privileged do not exercise it.  Even until their own eventual destruction.

13 November 2015

An Open Letter To Paul Krugman On the 'Republican Lust for Gold'


"People of privilege will always risk their complete destruction rather than surrender any material part of their advantage."

John Kenneth Galbraith, Age of Uncertainty

This is a response to Mr. Krugman's recent column as it was featured at Economist's View titled, Republican Lust for Gold

I am not in favor of a return to a gold standard.

I am a reasonably well-educated, politically progressive professional, a likely supporter of Bernie Sanders as an economic reformer and an opponent of endless war, and certainly not the 'Wall Street Democrats.'   I believe that the current 'debate' over the place of gold in the economy is breaking along ideological lines to the point of a religious fervor and intellectual blindness, on both sides.

I think of gold as an alternative store of wealth, which without any sanctions from the state pro or con can serve a very useful purpose. It gives people a 'choice.' It can act as a barometer of sentiment. And it serves a purpose, especially in times of pervasive fraud in the financial asset markets, as an asset without mispriced or even hidden counterparty risk if held directly.

And if you think that the problem of pervasive fraud has been fixed you are sorely mistaken.

If a system cannot stand the criticism offered by something which it cannot and probably ought not to control, then perhaps the fault is in the system, and not in the critics.

And while we are on the topic, what by any stretch of the imagination do you subscribe the issue of 'gold' to the Republican establishment? Who shut the gold window in 1971? One of the few things that Chairman Greenspan said is that statists from both sides of the aisle despise and fear gold because it constrains them in their quest for discretionary power. And he was right.

The current 'stimulus' is a massive failure because it has been trying to save a broken and largely unreformed financial system, rather than provide stimulus and support to the vast majority of the participants. It is the consequence of placing the highest priority in means and methods, because they are 'ours.' Our method, our model. First and foremost. Because we fear for our credibility.

And so the participants who are complicit in the fraud and those who are invested politically in the models and methods both become ensnared in a 'credibility trap,' and what Mike Lofgren has called 'the anti-knowledge of the elite.'

Unfortunately, Gresham's law is still works. Gold, and to a lesser extent silver, are flowing 'en masse' to Asia in almost astonishing numbers of tonnes each month. The numbers are there, little publicized and noted in the prestige media, but almost shocking. It has not yet made its way fully into official reporting mechanisms, even so called 'industry organs.'

Mr. Krugman, nine out of ten Americans will notice that the vast peoples of Asia and the Mideast are not 'Republicans.'   The central banks of the world are hardly 'Republicans,' but they became net buyers of gold around 2007.

No, they are not the easily mocked Republicans.

But they are looking for a safe alternative to a monetary and financial system that is going off the rails, again.  The modern hypothesis that all money is purely arbitrary is only feasible if one has the ability to make their purely arbitrary valuations stick.   That is the Faustian bargain with the will to power, the endless war of the monetary relativists.

Would we make enemies of the whole world for the sake of a corrupt and unsustainable financial system? Alas, some would, and are doing so even now.

As I am sure you know, once a force like Gresham's Law goes into effect, which it already has, it can quickly turn into a torrent of consequences.  Will we continue to argue until that event is upon us, as we did with the prevalent fraud in the housing bubble that was created by the same perpetrators who have continued to rig markets even until today?

The dogmatic modelist and political hack sees China and India and other nations buying gold and says, 'We must stop this! Control it!' The thinker sees a sea change in the monetary markets and says, 'we must understand why this is happening, and what we may be doing to provoke it. And if we are doing something wrong, then correct it.'

No I do not support the gold standard, not at all. It would be entirely inappropriate for a patient still in the ICU to be prescribed a regime of hard exercise and strict diet. And the corruption in this system is capable of corrupting anything, even an external standard.

Given the proper regulation, transparency, and judgement, a paper currency can emulate the steadiness of a gold standard while allowing for more latitude in times of distress. Do you really believe that we have held to that prescription with our serial bubbles, frauds and crises?

But I do feel quite strongly that the current policy of constant market intervention in the West, which is obviously happening to anyone who is capable and experienced in watching trade patterns, is going to tear a hole in the facade that this sick series of policy errors is becoming.

If one takes even a cursory look at the trade flows of gold, one can see that the flows into Asia and the Mideast are relentless, and growing. And the decline of 'free float' in the UK and US in particular is striking. The numbers are difficult to discover, but some have taken on that task.

The leverage and shuffling of free bullion around to dull the interest in leverage is approaching 300 to 1 in NYC and 200 to 1 in the 'physical' LBMA market in London is the kind of obvious error that one looks back at from the wreckage and says, 'What were they thinking?'

We made a mistake. A big one.  We have tolerated a farcically ineffective program of 'reform' and a massive top down stimulus focused on the 'system' with an austerity for the public that is going to rip a tear in the social fabric which will take years, and a significant amount of pain, to mend.

It is going to happen, no matter what models or arguments you may wish to stick your head in. I am not trying to argue a point. I am trying to encourage people to at least look at what is happening, and to stop comforting themselves with obviously faulty numbers and metrics from a system that has stopped serving most participants in favor of a powerful few.

This is going to end badly. I was more demure when we had similar discussions here like this prior to the housing bubble collapse. 'And no one could have seen it coming.'  Because their eyes were closed and they comforted themselves with what they wanted to hear.

There is, at some point, going to be a dislocation in the international currency and bond markets.   And it will be noticeable, unless we change our ways and embrace honesty, transparency, broader equity, and reform.

It will not come from the political process, because that has also been broken by the power of big money.  That has become so painfully obvious that the only way to continue to justify it is to declare corporations to be 'people' and bribery to be 'free speech.'

People may think of themselves as 'Keynesians,'  and what the 'other side' thinks about Keynes is admittedly mostly an ideologically tainted caricature.  But first and foremost what made Keynes effective was his practical focus on the desired results and not to a preconceived model which crushes out the better part of reality in its understandable and unfortunate inadequacy that is common to all 'models.'  Keynes was an independent thinker who was confident enough to occasionally change his mind without worrying overmuch about his credibility, and not an acolyte of some constraining school of thought made dogma. 
No, rather than a 'gold standard' now I think gold should stand alone, and be allowed to speak whatever truths it may. As for any use of it by nations, let them make what use of it as they wish. It is a tool. But once they make it 'official' they cannot seem to keep from trying to cage it, and control it. But by then it is merely collateral damage of a growing corruption and fraud of finance, rarely without an accomplice in monetary economics.

At some point the thought leaders will have to rise above their own political enthusiasms and personal aspirations and begin to honestly and openly address what is going wrong. And then perhaps we may begin to push for the return of some of the basic principles hammered out in the 'New Deal' which we so foolishly allowed to be weakened and then overthrown in the 1990s, and even until now.

And, Mr. Krugman, that was a decidedly bipartisan effort. And the players and their enablers who brought us that misery are still active, unabashedly, in the highest circles of power.





30 October 2015

Latest Shanghai Gold Withdrawals Cross the 10,000 Tonne Mark - 2013 a Pivotal Year


In the first chart we see that there were about 57 tonnes of gold bullion withdrawn from the SGE into China in the latest week.  This is not 'official reserves' but all gold without regard to the receiving party.

This pushes the cumulative withdrawals of Shanghai gold over the 10,000 tonne mark.  Not bad for less than seven years in the business.

This does not include gold that flows through Hong Kong, or through any other non-exchange means purported to be used by the People's Bank of China.

On the second chart you can see that Year-To-Date Shanghai has released 2,119 tonnes into China.  Compared to prior years 2015 is clearly going to be a new record if the withdrawals maintain this pace.

One thing that struck me on that second chart tonight is that Shanghai withdrawals took a definite leg up in 2013.

This is also the same year that the price of gold in Dollars was smacked lower, and the ratio of potential claims to registered gold on the Comex began to climb, and eventually start to go parabolic this year.

Perhaps the bullion bank apologists and shills are right, and this is all just meaningless, an optical illusion, or some fantasy.  Gold is just like pet rocks,  and the majority of the people in the world, and throughout recorded history for that matter,  are just confused and demented.

As I mentioned earlier this evening, the tails risks look rather fat.  One might wonder that even a dingy gray swan with a weak wing could trigger a fairly impressive set of 'unforeseeable incidents.'

They'll never learn.  Why should they?  Winning....

But perhaps we are much closer to the end of this than most people might imagine.  Given the explosive ingredients in place it may be hard to miss.


Related: LBMA Apparently Altered Its Gold Flow By 2,200 Tonnes


These charts are from Nick Laird at Goldchartsrus.com.





Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Non-Farm Payrolls Next Week - Tail Risk Warning


Gold just will not give us a signal to buy for the short term here yet.  So I remain sitting tight on all my long term positions.  Same with silver.

I did buy a little short side on stocks themselves today.

The action in the precious metals the past few days seemed exceptionally artificial, and that is saying a lot in these markets.

I suspect some of this was end-of-month shenanigans.

The December gold contract is a fairly significant force, and we should start feeling its effects sometime in November.

The Bucket Shop warehouses showed a little more gold passing to the house account at JPM,  and the usual slow leakage out of the silver stores.

The 'nested W' bottom formation is off the table, and now we are in the uptrending range trade, if that can hold as shown on the first chart below.

It has been a long time since we have seen any kind of chart formation working.  This is not a surprise given the obvious price manipulation in gold and silver, similar to what we have seen in so many other markets including the forex which is a cousin to the metals trade.

A Russian bank has joined the Shanghai Gold Exchange, which continues to move impressive amounts of gold bullion from various sources, especially Switzerland and London, into China.

As I have noted previously, the completely new phenomenon of spiking leverage with paper over physical gold in New York and London coincides with the attempt to take the price down after its increase in the most recent leg of the bull market.

I am inclined by what I can see to think that unless the exchanges and the regulators get their act together and rein in the big bullion traders and the mispricing of risk that they are going to have a real mess on their hands if these high levels of leverage get forcibly unwound.

I think the facts bear this out, despite the 'down your nose' scoffing at any risks by apologists and insiders.  But that's just my own opinion, and I doubt anyone involved in the money flows from this trade will care.  And if it does fall apart, 'no one could have seen it coming.'

As Kyle Bass pointed out, no one with a fiduciary (or regulatory) responsibility can ignore what has happened in the gold market since 2013.  But some are, and with an almost reckless disregard.

Let me be clear, since one of the tactics that the apologists use is to purposely misconstrue any warnings.   I am not concerned about a 'default' on the exchange, in the form of a failure to deliver.

Rather, I am saying that the factors that effect tail risks are now so extended in the gold market that even a relatively small imbalance or exogenously driven spike in demand can result in a market dislocation in price that will bring the exchange and perhaps some participants to their knees, and result in a global cascade of grossly mispriced counter-party risks.

Non-Farm Payrolls for October will be reported next week.

Have a pleasant weekend.











16 October 2015

Nova Scotia Apparently Backing the Meager Action in Comex Gold - Gresham's Law


Gresham's law is an economic principle that states that when an official market or cartel overvalues one type of money or asset and undervalues another with respect to its fair market value and risks, the undervalued money or asset will leave the country as best it can, or will disappear from circulation into hoards, while the overvalued money or assets will flood into circulation.

Let me stipulate up front that when it comes to the global gold market, the Comex has actual gold flows that are so meager compared to the amount of trading which occurs on paper that I have said it is starting to look like The Bucket Shop.

And in recognition to the disclaimer statement that appears on all of their documents, the exchange makes no claims and accept no liability that any of these numbers are accurate. They are taking the originators of these numbers at their word, some of which are Banks which have recently been shown to be serial offenders when it comes to their financial dealings, pricing, and representations.

As of Wednesday, only 171,613 ounces (5.13 tonnes) were 'up for delivery.'   In a global market where the daily deliveries are measured in metric tonnes, that is a very small amount.

In terms of overall active Comex contracts, that represents a paper to physical leverage of roughly 263 to 1, compared to a historic trend of about 24:1.

And as I looked things over, I was struck by the fact that of those meager ounces available, 101,312 (3.2 tonnes) were from the vaults of Nova Scotia, or roughly 60% of the total.

That struck a chord in my memory, so I looked over the list of deliveries for the month of October.

Of the pathetically small amount of 240 contracts, or 24,000 ounces (.75 tonnes) delivered in the entire month, 17,600 have come from the 'house account' at Nova Scotia.

And the 'takers' of those few ounces have been the 'house accounts' at JP Morgan and HSBC.

So what I am trying to prove with all this?  Nothing.   I am merely showing an interesting trend change that has gone largely overlooked, except in some notable exceptions of the 'smart money.'

And I am documenting some facts for those who have a mind to see them, and to establish a record that people can refer to when these jokers blow up yet another market through their reckless obsession with gambling large.

It shows that in a world of global gold flows, very little is moving in the Comex warehouses, and the little that is changing hands seems to be moving between the houses of three of the big bullion banks.

And it tend to support a hypothesis that the gold trading in London and New York has taken on the character of currency crosses, and lost their ties to the physical commodity nature of the product.  This divergence may be convenient for the management of the price, and for easy profits for those managing the game.

But it has longer term consequences which will eventually come back to shock the markets.  Where have we seen these types of divergences among risk, valuation, and the underlying realities before?  In just about every financial fraud and following crisis in the modern era at least.

So remember this when the next crisis comes, and the distraction, dissimulation, and duplicities are put forward, and the search for non-consequential scapegoats is underway. And you are expected to bail out these jokers once again 'to save the system.'

I am fairly confident that all of this will come to pass if things do not change, and serious reform and enforcement of the rules of the markets are not undertaken.  So far the changes we have are largely cosmetic.  In a plutocracy big money manages the government and the media;  they have bought and paid for it.  And eliminating government only serves to eliminate the middleman.  Transparency and reform are the only sustainable answer.

The big action in the precious metal bullion markets is in Asia.

And gold and silver bullion are steadily flowing from West to East because of a mispricing of valuation and risks.   And the reason for the stunning drop in physical trading activity in the West is because in a manifestation of Gresham's Law,  the hypothecated paper metals are driving out the bullion out of the market.

This is a trend, and it has significance to those who are willing to see it.






15 October 2015

A Closer Look At An Evolving Gold Chart Formation - Three Scenarios - Time


"Le temps mûrit toute choses; par le temps toutes choses viennent en évidence; le temps est père de la vérité."

François Rabelais


“Hubris calls for nemesis, and in one form or another it's going to get it, not as a punishment from outside, but as the completion of a pattern already started.”

Mary Midgley, Myths We Live By

As we have seen so many times, the nature of a chart formation is revealed at key moments when the chart action approaches a critical decision point, especially after a sustained move higher or lower.

In this case gold is struggling hard to break a multi-year bear market and form a successful bottom off the big 1080 support.

The gold bulls can hope for a retracement that finds support fairly quickly, and mounts another assault at making a higher high than the last failed breakout attempt that was stopped at 1230.

The gold bears are quite confident, to the point of overconfidence in their ability to smash the price lower with an avalanche of paper sells in quiet hours after two years of having their way with this market.

And all the while they have been setting themselves up for an eventual confrontation with the physical consequences of their actions.  By now this should be a very familiar theme for a willful generation on any number of fronts.

A bullish interpretation can hold with declines even down to the bottom of a new bullish uptrending channel.

A break to the downside of 1120 negates this formation.

So in summary there are three general outcomes.
The first is a shallow retracement and a breakout that takes some greater momentum higher towards the 1300 level and makes the bottom with some decisiveness.

The second is a deeper retracement, with support found somewhere above 1120, with another assault mounted for a breakout higher from there.

And lastly, we must keep an open mind about a possible breakdown below 1120 setting up a retest of support, perhaps down towards 1080, or the establishment of a trading range.
I am not applying the normal probabilities to this evolving chart formation because of the obvious price manipulation that has been occurring in the paper gold markets, justified in the minds of the ringleaders no doubt by 'the currency war' and the flexing of monetary muscles.

In this environment gold and silver are being traded more like currency crosses, and less like commodities with a real basis of physical supply and demand underlying the transactions.

Perhaps the money masters may take their cue from the platinum coin, and declare a pile of sand to a thousand tonnes of bullion, of whatever variety they wish.

And you might be suprised at how many true believers will gratefully rise to praise this, drinking deeply of the madness of the will to power.  If only all would believe, it would be true! But alas, they never do.   There are always a stubborn few who fail to follow the dream into the abyss.  And so the world divides into the enlightened and the spoilers, between us, and them.

To the truly relativistic mind, nothing is impossible if you apply enough conviction and power, at least in the musings of the modern and, at the lingering last, the high walled bunkers of the few.  Their pipe bowls waft out familiar dreams, of freedom from restraints, and from their own mortality, and in the end perhaps, the last of their humanity.

All will be revealed with time.  We cannot presume to know exactly when.

Till human voices wake us, and we drown.





25 September 2015

How Much of 1,740 Tons of London 'Good Delivery' Gold Monetized and Sent to China Central Bank


Koos Jansen has an interesting piece out this morning, that asks some very insightful questions in the ongoing attempt to connect the dots between the shocking decline in the 'float' of unencumbered gold out of the London Vaults with the tremendous, and not always fully visible, flows of gold into strong hands and Asian Vaults.

As you may recall it was Koos' groundbreaking work in analyzing the Shanghai Gold Exchange that blew the lid off the enormous flows of physical gold into China, despite the stubborn opposition of some well paid establishment analysts.

And all of this is relevant to what some have called 'the currency war,' which is the attempt to forge a new international monetary regime out of the ruins of the Bretton Woods Agreement and the fiat petrodollar.

This analysis ties together with a number of highly significant events, including the backwardation of gold price, the flight of gold from the registered category at Comex, and the tightness of physical supply in London as shown by lease rates and informed observations, despite the usual scoffing from apologists.

I have seen various estimates that the London float is now adequate for about 4 to 12 months at most, given this draining of supply, before the market gets into serious trouble.  That is unless a central bank or gold pool friendly semi-official fund undertakes to divest itself of more their nation's gold, as England apparently did by selling their sovereign gold wealth on the cheap near the turn of the century to bail out their banking chums, in the odd case of Brown's Bottom.

The gold in this current instance seems more likely to have been taken out as leases and sales from custodial gold holdings at the Bank of England, and the stores of gold that is backing ETFs and Funds in private vaults, having been disgorged by the actions of their participants and custodians, often the self-dealing bullion banks.

Perhaps this is mistaken.  Perhaps there is a reasonable explanation for all this oddness in the gold market.  Good then let us hear it, and not these silly scoldings and transparent fabrications of nonsense that seem to be the stock in trade of the bullion bullies and paperati which only serve to fuel more doubt and questions.

And why is it again that the US and UK were unable to return Germany's national gold stores in a reasonable timeframe?  And India desperately looks for ways to limit their peoples' appetite for physical bullion of their own?  So many questions, so much leverage, secrecy, and stonewalling.

As Koos Jansen observes:
Consider the following:
  • Good Delivery gold bars can be monetized – in countries like the UK, Hong Kong, Switzerland and Singapore – from where they can be shipped into China while circumventing global trade statistics. This is because monetary Good Delivery gold bars are exempt from global trade statistics (UN, IMTS 2010). Needless to say monetary imports into China are conducted by the PBOC.
  • Non-monetary Good Delivery gold bars (declared at international customs departments) imported into the Chinese domestic gold market are required to be sold through the SGE. However, trading volume at the SGE in GD bars has been a mere 3 tonnes in all of history.
We can thus conclude that if any Good Delivery gold bars have entered China these did not go through the SGE system where Chinese citizens, banks and institutions buy gold. Instead, it’s likely that the Good Delivery gold bars that crossed the Chinese border went directly to the PBOC vaults...
Nick Laird and I noticed that although the total amount of physical gold in London fell roughly 2,744 tonnes (9,000 – 6,256) over four years (graph 1), only 997 tonnes were net exported as non-monetary gold (graph 4). This makes me wonder where the residual 1,747 tonnes (2,744 – 997) went. Possibly, this gold has been monetized in the UK and covertly shipped to a central bank in Asia, for example China. I don’t have rock hard evidence, but it fits right into the wider analyses.
You may read the entire piece and its complete evidence and reasoning The London Float And PBOC Gold Purchases.

One thing that is strikingly odd about this is that it is one of the more revelatory accumulations of data on the shadowy corners of the global gold market since Frank Veneroso's seminal study of the flows in the gold market involving central bank gold at the beginning of the great bull market that began at the start of the new century.

And yet so many sites still have not picked up on this sea change and unfolding currency war, despite it tying together so many other observations and data and market tremors.  Perhaps it is insufficiently pedigreed.   The contrarian perspective says that this may be the hallmark of the real thing.




24 September 2015

Nick Laird: The London Gold Float Is Running Unusually Low


The gold pool is expressing some interesting dynamics that appear to be winding towards a denouement of sorts.

The current trajectory could change if the price is allowed to rise to clear the market, or any number of other seemingly improbable events.

The silver market is also acting very oddly.  I have not gotten a real handle on that, other than soaring premiums for coins and a lack of serioius buying in the US compared to the rest of the world. Similar to gold in some ways, although the central banks have no stockpiles of silver with which to rescue the bullion banks, again.

It is funny but few seem to notice these things, or even care, for whatever reasons that people do not notice something until it is too late to do anything meaningful.

I think that sometimes we can become 'victims of the ordinary.'  When the same thing happens again and again, we expect the same thing to happen next, and any change from this pattern seems almost unimaginable.

"My main focus is to try to bring into context the size of the "London Float" out of the shadows and into the light of day. The London Float being the working supply of gold available to meet the markets daily needs.

One must treat this with the consideration that much of the known gold shown is already owned & not available to meet the markets needs - not unless the owner wants to sell. The presumption being that the Central Banks reserves are not available to the market. They do lease/swap but under their own intent and of late the trend has been to not lend in risky markets but rather to claw back physical into direct ownership.

The years around 2000 were when the Mine Hedge Book was most active with approx 3200 tonnes being lent into the markets by the Central Banks.  By 2007 much of the Hedge Book had been closed out & they were under 1000 tonnes falling under 100 tonnes by 2013. From 2011 gold repatriations of Central Bank reserves started & since then have only grown.

So one presumption from this study is that over time the stance of the Central Banks has been to reduce their lending and bring their gold closer to home. Hence the presumption that the gold held in the Bank of England is mostly all there, unencumbered and released from leasing and swaps. Obviously some will still be lent out but the presumption is that the tonnages lent out are far smaller than in the past...

The UK Imports approx 602 tonnes per year & exports approx 388 tonnes per year (since 1999) according to the EuroStats database (thanks kindly Koos). However with the recent gold demand from Asia these statistics have changed dramatically. Since the start of 2011 the UK has imported 2982 tonnes & exported 3998 tonnes with net exports of 1016 tonnes seeing exports double their normal average to 800 tonnes per year.

This leaves the London Vaults with a FLOAT of between 1361 tonnes and 200 tonnes with the probability that it is closer to the lower number.  If it is closer to 200 tonnes then London does have a problem as a FLOAT of this size is not enough to cover their flows for 4 months."

Read the entire analysis with charts at The London Float.


Related: Shrinking Supply of Available Gold In London For World Demand




23 September 2015

Shrinking Supply of Available Gold In London For World Demand - Timely Caution


It is reasonable to estimate that London, in all the vaults, has only about 900 to 250 tonnes of gold available for physical delivery, which is a shockingly low figure given the current demand from 'The Silk Road' nations alone that is running about 1,700 tonnes per year.  And even that 250 number is questionably high, depending on the status of the gold in the Bank of England.

The objective is to attempt to determine how much available physical gold for delivery can be wrung out of London and New York, in excess of what can be had from scrap, minining and leasing. We are calling that 'the gold float,' and it is feeding the demand for bullion in Asia.  At that point we might estimate when the pressure on price becomes irresistible.

We are thinking months, not years, at least with things as they are.

I wish to acknowledge up front the debt that is owed to Ronan Manly and Nick Laird especially for the data contained herein, as well as Koos Jansen for his ground breaking work in estimating Asian gold demand, and Bron Sucheki for his participation..  I have listed some of the pertinent published articles below.

It is regretful that one can only provide estimates.  But that is the nature of this beast that operates with secrecy of supply and distortion of actual demand.

What manner of business is this to enable price discovery in a public market, by covering so many fundamentals with secrecy?  Where is the mining community in all this?

The LBMA is said by those who are in a position to know these things to be running 90:1 or more leverage to each of its unallocated ounces of gold, which according to Jim Rickards is all of them.

The potential claims per deliverable ounce at the Comex right now is at an historic nosebleed high by of about 255:1, supposedly because the owners which to avoid a 'short squeeze' in bullion, although the party who said this did not say 'where.'  London probably, maybe Switzerland.

Peter Hambro says that "there is not enough physical about. There are endless promises."

In a nutshell, we now know that physical gold for global delivery, of which the London vaults are a major supplier, are rather tight, especially given the increasing demand for physical bullion in the East.

There is plenty of room for questioning the numbers and casting doubt on them, while hiding behind a curtain of exchange secrecy.  One might suppose that the gold bullion bank apologists will be hard at it soon enough again.

They too often do not help to advance the understanding of the public,  preferring to selectively twist the data to say 'all is well.'   They deride the supply problems that people in the industry are encountering, always saying they are not real.  And they like to include all the gold that exists in the warehouses for their calculations, whether someone else already owns it and is clearly not interested in selling at these prices.

More details would be useful, because if we could obtain a better idea on the extent of central bank leasing, we would be better able to estimate the risks and the relative fragility in the highly leveraged and hypothecated supply of gold in New York and London.

One would think from the known data that the unallocated gold in London is counter-claimed many times, and even the allocated and custodial gold is likely to have multiple claims upon it.   So the actual 'gold float' is probably quite a bit less than 1,361 tonnes.  Each of us has our own favorite ballpark number ranging from 900 to 250 tonnes and less, not fully accounting for leases and leverage on the remaining stock.

Nick Laird had a secondary outlier estimate which he expressed in colloquial Australian, which I dare not repeat here.  But it was quite low.  lol. Maybe four months worth of float left.

And it would certainly be nice to have more information about silver, especially since to my knowledge the central banks have dealt their own supply away some years ago and there are quite a few indications of tightness of supply, although not in the Comex yet.

I do consider this analysis to be a work in progress,    Nick Laird and Ronan Manly are the key data organizers I believe, with help from Koos Jansen and Bron Suchecki, and the odd bit from Jesse the consulting detective.    So I would look to their sites for explication of their methods and sources. Ronan Manly in particular is a public source and he goes into quite a bit of detail.

Given the struggle it has been to obtain the data, and the refusal of central bank personnel to discuss their own supplies on orders from above, there may surely be gaps and errors in this, but not for lack of effort.

If I have any major concern it is that the management, the exchanges and the regulators, will allow the traders to sleep walk themselves into a rather serious situation.  And don't we know how little self-restraint these traders have been showing.

The remedy for this situation is not even more leverage, or more hypothecation of the unallocated stock, or even more leasing by the central banks, or more programs in India to dampen demand.

The longer they allow this price rigging and leveraging up, the slower productive mines will come on line, and the worse the tightness on the remaining physical supply will become.  But as they say in New York and London, 'nothing is broken yet.'

The market solution for this tightness of supply is HIGHER PRICES and not increasingly ludicrous jawboning, spin, and bear raids.

And if higher prices might inconvenience the policy and perception management aspirations of the Wall Street financiers, their enablers and associated hirelings, well then too bad. Try to behave more responsibly, and stop attempting to make the rest of the world pay for your excessive gambling losses and poor judgement.


Related:
On the LBMA and Their Unallocated Holdings
Lions and Tigers and Deriding the Tightness of Gold Supply
How Many Good Delivery Bars Are In the London Vaults - Ronan Manly
Central Bank Gold at the Bank of England - Ronan Manly* (detailed sourcing of this data)
The London Bullion Market and International Gold Trade - Koos Jansen
Detailed London Charts and much data gathering - Nick Laird (available to the public)




Here are a few additional charts from Nick Laird's site at goldchartsrus.com to break out a bit more detail and to provide some context for the estimated physical supply compared to physical demand.