10 January 2014

NAV Premiums for Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - 83,890 Ounces Redeemed From Sprott Gold


Since the last time I had checked earlier this month there was a redemption of 10,072,357 shares for 83,890 ounces of gold bullion from the Sprott Physical Gold Trust.  That is about 210 London Good Delivery bars.

I have heard some rumours about who has been asking around for delivery, but in checking I do not see anything official from the fund, so why speculate.  But for a redemption of over $103 million, I doubt it is the eBay crowd shuffling up to the window, so it is probably one of the usual suspects, the inside outers, not the big morgue macher. 

But then again, the Morgue has been in an acquisitive mood, and some say it is standing on a corner.

Redemptions at Sprott Gold had been very unusual, until recently it seems. Apparently that is changing, as the scraping of the bottom of the bullion barrel proceeds.  No wonder the fiatscos are getting restless.

Yeah, there is no unusual demand for physical gold bullion in Asia. Nothing to see here, move along. 

At least Sprott runs a fully allocated ship.  If a 'run' on the unallocated pools of gold starts, this could really get interesting.  

Deleveraging in a short squeeze.  Could be some tough love, kitten.

There was no activity in the Sprott Silver Trust.  But the cash levels in the PSLV Trust have gotten back down to the levels where another secondary offering of expansion might be in the offing sometime this year.  That would be a big physical buy in another tight market.  It could help to provide a 'come-to-Jesus' moment, as some have suggested.

But as we know all too well, anything goes in times of general deceit, with frickin' lasers, and the Banks breaking bad.  So let's just see what happens.

From the Sprott website for PHYS.
Unitholders will have the ability, on a monthly basis to redeem their units for physical gold bullion for a redemption price equal to 100% of the NAV of the redeemed units, less redemption and delivery expenses, including:
•the handling of the notice of redemption
•the delivery of the physical bullion for units that are being redeemed (estimated at $5 per troy ounce at the time of the prospectus, Feb. 2010 for delivery anywhere within continental US and Canada)
•and the applicable gold storage in-and-out fees (minimum $50 plus $5 per each additional bar, at the time of the prospectus).
Redemption requests must be for amounts that are at least equivalent to the value of one London Good Delivery bar or an integral multiple thereof, plus applicable expenses. A ''London Good Delivery bar'' weighs between 350 and 430 troy ounces (generally, most bars weigh between 390 and 410 troy ounces).


Comex Warehouse Registered Gold Inventory at 93 to 1


Getting a bit thin.

As a reminder, this is open interest as a ratio to registered (deliverable) gold.

January is not an 'active month.'

Higher prices would likely move gold into that deliverable category, and there is quite a bit in delivery ready form in the eligible category.

February is shaping up to be an interesting month.


09 January 2014

Bill Moyers: Moral Mondays, North Carolina State of Conflict







Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Interesting Development at the Comex


I thought it was interesting that 63,877 ounces of gold bullion left the registered inventory from Scotia Mocatta yesterday.  That brings the deliverable category down to a new low of 416,563 ounces for this leg of the bull market. 

In the past these big declines have tended to mark an intermediate price trend change within six months or so.  Let's see if that holds true this time.

As an aside, I wish to remind you again that the registered, or deliverable category, is not the sum total of all bullion at the Comex.  There are 7,711,145 ounces of bullion in storage that can be placed into a deliverable state with a procedural action. 

For my purposes, this is more of a indicator of pricing preferences, or a willingness to sell, rather than some likely default scenario. I know I have said that quite a few times, but I wanted it to sink in, especially for those who choose to misrepresent what this data implies, for whatever reason, bullish or bearish.

And I will probably post the latest chart on this later tonight.  Because one would tend to think that when available supply placed on the market becomes exceptionally low at certain prices, it could likely indicate higher prices will be required to bring additional supply to market. 

Not all supply is equal, in availability and quality, and prices are, after all, set at the margins.  Water water everywhere, but not a drop to drink, and all that. 

When fellows make the case that all the gold in the world is part of the supply in the same way for the purposes of supply and demand calculations I have to chuckle to myself.  Nothing could be further from the truth in almost every commodity I can think of, including gold.  Things are held by different actors for different purposes.

There are also those who will say, 'you cannot trust this data it could be faked or wrong.'  Yes, a lot of things could be this, or could be that.  Life is a school of probabilities.  But I notice these same people do not seem to hesitate to use the data they prefer for their own purposes, which also could be faked or wrong. 

So I think we can stipulate that we have to use any data we have with some reasonable caution and skepticism, especially in markets that are opaque.  There is plenty of gaming and fraud in these markets.

But if someone wishes to start dismissing the meaning of some data because of some degree of doubt, then they may as well apply that same stringent criteria to all the data which they use.  And in many cases if they do this, they would be compelled to shut up, because they will have nothing meaningful to say.  Alas, such integrity is very rare indeed.

So I think I will prefer to look at all the data available and pertinent, and draw reasonable inferences, testing them along the way, always looking at multiple sources and confirmations.  There is nothing wrong with formulating hypotheses.  That is what is known as 'the scientific method.'   It is what you do with them and how you use them that counts. 

And to that end if working with other people to find out what's what proves fruitful, I will do it of course, always and everywhere. That promise is the practical side of working hard on a blog for 'no pay.'  There are some others, but not easily accounted for on worldly ledgers. And it is more useful than watching sports, or reality TV, or whatever people do these days with their leisure hours.

But some sources of information are relatively dry wells, and not worth the time and effort to try and pull out anything, of even marginal value. 

Yes there is the value of educating the stubbornly ignorant, and the hope of mutual benefit, always.  And the mule may need a good washing, but that does not mean that I'm the one who is going to do it.  These days I would rather wait for rain.

Have a pleasant evening.





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - The Year of Divergences


Non-Farm Payrolls on Friday remains the 'big tickle' for Wall Street.

Stocks were largely flat ahead of the big event.

Sears was hammered after hours as the reality of the failing consumer continues to leak out from behind the stage props.

Obama made a speech today about rescuing beleaguered cities with 'promise zones.'  Who thought up that name?   I suppose it is better than Hoovervilles..

The Republicans continue to delight in needlessly tormenting the unfortunate on behalf of their paymasters.

And the band played on.

Have a pleasant evening.





The Roots of the Next Crisis, and the Dark Hallway Beyond


“Those who fail to exhibit positive attitudes, no matter the external reality, are seen as maladjusted and in need of assistance. Their attitudes need correction...

Suddenly, abused and battered wives or children, the unemployed, the depressed and mentally ill, the illiterate, the lonely, those grieving for lost loved ones, those crushed by poverty, the terminally ill, those fighting with addictions, those suffering from trauma, those trapped in menial and poorly paid jobs, those whose homes are in foreclosure or who are filing for bankruptcy because they cannot pay their medical bills, are to blame for their negativity.

The ideology justifies the cruelty of unfettered capitalism, shifting the blame from the power elite to those they oppress."

Chris Hedges

Here is a recent conversation I had with a friend about the current state of the US recovery.  As an accountant with a wide range of exposures, I enjoy hearing his perspective since I no longer have that sort of current insight into the corporate culture in America.  I have years of background running large businesses in corporations, and some forays into large scale M&A work, so I have seen quite a bit of it. The methods rarely change, merely the guises and degrees.

Here are excerpts from his side of the conversation with only one parenthetical comment of my own.

"I don’t think we’re seeing profits in a traditional sense. Instead, it appears to me that we’re watching a long, drawn out LBO’ing of America. It appears that companies are liquidating capital and returning it as opposed to earnings spreads on revenue.

It seems like we’re seeing the final blow-off phase that started with the stock option becoming the primary form of compensation for corporate talent. By drawing out the LBO, they re-stock their options each year with a guaranteed return thanks to the Fed and their own Treasury Departments.

The problem is that you can’t have systematic corporate buybacks with employment/economic growth as they create diametrically opposite outcomes. The more work I do, the more I conclude that the US economy has not expanded since 2006.

I was looking at mutual fund data the other day and it showed that people moved their fixed income money into domestic equity - $185 billion in liquidated bond funds to buy $175 billion in equity funds. This happened after the Fed announced tapering was on the table. Just like the gold market, I suspect that “someone” forced the liquidation of bond funds and herded the money into equity funds to keep the rally going.  (I think it is perfectly reasonable to flee bond funds at any time that interest rates are turning higher.  Bond funds often take it on the chin in such a deleveraging of a long term interest rate trend.   However, I think the whole taper thing was hyped and used by the wiseguys, as are most things these days by our financial masters of the universe. - Jesse)

Coincidentally, corporations used half a trillion in cash flow on buybacks. It’s a liquidity game but with limitations. What’s the next asset that can be liquidated or levered? They’re still working on gold but sometime soon, the price of gold will be set in the East, where the gold resides. Agricultural commodities are being liquidated but that ensures a drop in planting next year. Oil is too valuable on the geopolitical front to liquidate.

There are certainly winners in this economy but far more losers. At some point, the weight of the losers acts against the winners, many of whom are levered up with confidence. Corporations can liquidate equity capital but we all know how the LBO’d companies operated in the 1990’s. In many ways, they’ve gotten corporations to behave like consumers did in the 2000’s, only this time they’re trained to buy back their own stock. Every cycle has natural limits.

We know that corporate cash flow is no longer growing and we know that it’s more expensive to sell debt today than a year ago. We also know that the Fed sees the stock market as their proof of success. So how does this shakeout? If corporations are a lemon, how much juice can you squeeze out of the lemon?"

Although I do not wish to be an alarmist, I have to say that this trend of attempting to sustain the unsustainable has gone on longer than I had previously thought possible.

I am fairly sure that the next crisis will bring these things to a head and some sort of resolution. But therein also lies great danger. Philosophies that have grown time can have deep roots, and when faced with what to them is an intolerable change, can react somewhat excessively. They may even welcome the opportunity to act excessively and decisively, at least in their own minds, as the path to winning.

When a ruling subculture that has become accustomed to crushing and liquidating things for its own power and pleasure, whether it is natural resources, the environment, crops, animals, land, or social organizations, eventually runs out of things, it can become frustrated and angry in its seeming impotence to continue on, to keep expanding.

Indirectly and somewhat benignly at first, but with a growing efficiency and determination over time, it will begin with the weak and the defenseless, attacking and objectifying them, even in the most petty of ways and impositions. It will turn to its critics, and then everyone who is defined by them as 'the other.'

That is when a predatory social and economic philosophy can turn into pure fascism, and start liquidating people.  And finally it liquidates and consumes itself.

But really, no one wakes up one morning and suddenly decides, 'Today I will become a monster, and wantonly kill innocent women and children.'

Otherwise ordinary people get to that point slowly, one convenient rationalization for their 'necessary and expedient' behavior at a time. After all, they are the good people, they are the strong, they are the most successful and the favored.

 They are the entitled, and not these others who would seek to drain them, drag them back down. They are the champions of progress and achievement and civilisation, the hardest working, and the epitome of mankind.  

What could possibly go wrong? 

"He prompts you what to say, and then listens to you, and praises you, and encourages you. He bids you mount aloft. He shows you how to become as gods. Then he laughs and jokes with you, and gets intimate with you; he takes your hand, and gets his fingers between yours, and grasps them, and then you are his."

J. H. Newman, The AntiChrist

If you are one who thinks that the above 'could not possibly happen here,' and I am sure that there are many, you may wish to read the following vignette from modern US history. Alan Nasser, FDR's Response to the Plot to Overthrow Him

08 January 2014

The Recovery™ In One Chart


"A new tyranny is thus born, invisible and often virtual, which unilaterally and relentlessly imposes its own laws and rules...

Such an economy kills. "

Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Francis I


"When you won, you divided the profits amongst you, and when you lost, you charged it to the Bank [of the United States]...

You are a den of vipers and thieves. I have determined to rout you out, and by the Eternal, (bringing his fist down on the table), I will rout you out."

Andrew Jackson

Corporatism by any other name, or brand...

h/t for the chart to those wild and crazy guys at GMU.

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts


"Life is a school of probabilities."

Walter Bagehot

Sometimes, when things don't add up, that's because they don't.  I'm sure that someone must have said that once.

There was intraday commentary about monetary theory here. It is somewhat related to the characteristics of money that pertain to gold, among other things.

Gold and silver are going to churn around a bit ahead of the Non-Farm Payrolls report.

There was a little movement in and out of the Comex warehouses yesterday, as noted below.

And sometimes, you draw an exceptionally good hand at poker.  You didn't do anything in particular to deserve it, except to keep sitting in your seat, and not lose your place at the table.

But at the very best of times, you can sit pat on that exceptionally good hand, and allow the action to roll around the table without much effort.  The other players let you watch them work, read their tells and antics, and enjoy the ride. 

And the sweetest moment is to say very little, until the time finally comes to throw down, and then all the talking is done.

Have a pleasant evening.





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Like a Patient Etherized Upon a Table


The ADP employment number came in 'better than expected' today. This month's Hunger Games, the Non-Farm Payrolls, are on Friday.

I see where Boris, the lord mayor of London, is readying his water cannon for the summer of our discontent.

It looks like nature herself is blasting the coasts of Albion with water cannons of her own righteous indignation. Perhaps a portent? Or just our brave new world.

The bubble economy continues to bubble on, KBO , with a bull dogged determination. Although one can hardly blame it for a moment of indecision here and there, hiding its ragged claws from less austere, and more discerning, eyes.

And having seen the moment of their greatness flicker, they are afraid. Or was that just a teleprompter glitch, leaving their majesties temporarily agape, almost ridiculous, almost, at times, the Fool?

And will Bernanke return, like Greenspan's ghost, saying, “That is not what I meant at all; that is not it, at all”?

Until global excess wakes us, and we drown.

Have a pleasant evening.






Ben Bernanke On Money and the Sophistry of Modern Monetary Theory


soph·is·try (s f -str ). n. pl. soph·is·tries. 1. Plausible but fallacious argumentation. 2. A plausible but misleading or fallacious argument.

I see the Cullen Roche is back at it again, telling us all about the wonders of modern money. The Biggest Myths in Economics

I will take these myths, and comment on them one by one.  Some things make sense, and others, not so much.  But perhaps the discussion will help to shed some light.

I am going to try to do it simply and in straightforward language, because that is often the best antidote to sophistry.

1) The government “prints money”.

The government really doesn’t 'print money' in any meaningful sense. Most of the money in our monetary system exists because banks created it through the loan creation process. The only money the government really creates is due to the process of notes and coin creation. These forms of money, however, exist to facilitate the use of bank accounts.

This is the 'I didn't do it, because the guys who are working for me did it' argument.

As you might recall, the banks in the US, and most other places, operated under a license and regulation of the government. The banks are part of the Federal Reserve System. They create money under the supervision and regulation of the Federal Reserve Bank, which in turn is answerable to the government.

Most of the time the money is created, organically if you will, through economic activity. The Fed exercises quite a bit of direct and indirect control over this process as both actor in the markets and a regulator. This is the very basis of the Federal Reserve.

At other times, the Fed is able to create money on its own volition, by expanding its Balance Sheet. It can create money at will, and uses it to enact its policy objectives. Whether you say 'print' or 'create' money is a matter of usage, as they are both essentially the same in this context unless you are given to splitting hairs.

You want to know the difference here?  If some bank or person started 'printing' its own money apart from the Federal Reserve system or the rules of the government over commercial paper they would shut them down in a Manhattan minute.  Just ask the Liberty coins guy.  The almighty dollar is a jealous god.

There were times in the past when the 'currency of the US' was created by private parties and circulated.   That is not the case now, except in the fevered minds of creative imaginations.
2)  Banks “lend reserves”
  
This myth derives from the concept of the money multiplier, which we all learn in any basic econ course.  It implies that banks who have $100 in reserves will then “multiply” this money 10X or whatever.  This was a big cause of the many hyperinflation predictions back in 2009 after QE started and reserve balances at banks exploded due to the Fed’s balance sheet expansion.  But banks don’t make lending decisions based on the quantity of reserves they hold.

Banks lend to creditworthy customers who have demand for loans. If there’s no demand for loans it really doesn’t matter whether the bank wants to make loans.
This one gets definitionally tricky, because it involves the terminology of bank accounting and its own particular jargon. But let us cut to the heart of it by saying that banks make loans with some regards to their assets. A person cannot just stand up with no money in their pockets and say, I am a bank and am going to start making loans. They need to be licensed by the government, and must adhere to certain requirements from their books.   Those nasty things like leverage, risk, etc.

As for Banks being in the business of making loans, that is nonsense. Banks are in the business of making money, and we should never forget that.  Sitting idly on what in another business would be called working capital does not do them much good. And people tend to mistake 'working capital' for 'reserves' and that's where we go off into the jargon wilderness.

What is a creditworthy loan? This is not some black and white threshold, good or bad, but more like better or worse, an analog measurement of risk and reward. Anyone who has ever funded competing projects in corporations understand this. It is intimately tied to risk return and competing opportunities.

I would certainly think that most people understand that making commercial loans for some meager basis points in return over the long haul is boring stuff compared to the opportunities to be had in gaming hot money markets for outsized gains and large bonuses tied to short term results.

And that is the heart of much of the problems in the financial system today. Speculation is crowding out investment from the commercial banking system due to the repeal of Glass-Steagall, and the laxity of regulating the abusive practices of large and powerful players in the markets.
3) The US government is running out of money and must pay back the national debt.

There seems to be this strange belief that a nation with a printing press whose debt is denominated in the currency it can print, can become insolvent. There are many people who complain about the government 'printing money' while also worrying about government solvency. It’s a very strange contradiction...

As I’ve described before, the US government is a contingent currency issuer and could always create the money needed to fund its own operations. Now, that doesn’t mean that this won’t contribute to high inflation or currency debasement, but solvency (not having access to money) is not the same thing as inflation (issuing too much money).
This is a nice piece of sophistry because while it knocks down a thesis, it does not prove its antithesis.

Because the US government is NOT running out of money, and it does NOT have to pay back the national debt, that does not mean that the national debt has no limit. It just means that we have not yet reached it, whatever that may be.

At some point you have to get off the theoretical merry-go-round and try to exchange some of that money which you declare that you have for real goods. And the perspective of the counterparty weighs in heavily on that transaction I daresay. One only has to look at the many, many failed currencies throughout history, from 'contingent currency issuers,' in order to understand the fallacy of this argument.

Certainly you can force your own citizens to adhere to your commands, as the MMT crowd are often wont to imply.  But it is still a larger world out there, and absent one world government, there are some degrees of freedom in determining currency valuations.
4) The national debt is a burden that will ruin our children’s futures.

The national debt is often portrayed as something that must be “paid back”. As if we are all born with a bill attached to our feet that we have to pay back to the government over the course of our lives. Of course, that’s not true at all. In fact, the national debt has been expanding since the dawn of the USA and has grown as the needs of US citizens have expanded over time. There’s really no such thing as “paying back” the national debt unless you think the government should be entirely eliminated (which I think most of us would agree is a pretty unrealistic view of the world).
This one is almost the same as myth number 3. The national debt is something that will always exist in a debt based system. The pricing of debt in a marketplace is how the Federal Reserve system and Treasury are theoretically restrained from the excessive creation of money.

The very money in your pocket is itself is a 'note' of obligation on the Balance Sheet of the Fed, and overall a debt obligation of the Treasury.  The 'full faith and credit' of the United States if you will.

But that does not mean that the debt cannot become a burden on our children. If the debt is misspent and squandered and allowed to outgrow the capacity to manage it, it can become a very real burden.

But I find that those who make this argument are typically those who have already grabbed a good portion of the money from some financial bubble, and now seek to hold their gains.   Debt must be managed.

To this point Cullen says "All government spending isn’t necessarily bad just like all private sector spending isn’t necessarily good." And I agree with this completely.
5) QE is inflationary 'money printing' and/or 'debt monetization'

Quantitative Easing (QE) is a form of monetary policy that involves the Fed expanding its balance sheet in order to alter the composition of the private sector’s balance sheet. This means the Fed is creating new money and buying private sector assets like MBS or T-bonds.

When the Fed buys these assets it is technically 'printing' new money, but it is also effectively 'unprinting' the T-bond or MBS from the private sector. When people call QE 'money printing' they imply that there is magically more money in the private sector which will chase more goods which will lead to higher inflation. But since QE doesn’t change the private sector’s net worth (because it’s a simple swap) the operation is actually a lot more like changing a savings account into a checking account. This isn’t 'money printing' in the sense that some imply.
Well yeah, it is money printing, although I agree it is not magical. The Fed simply expands its Balance Sheet and creates, or prints if you will, Federal Reserve notes of zero duration, also known as dollars, and exchanges them for assets of various durations and quality at non-market based prices. It is not limited to Treasury debt, but can include almost anything really according to the Fed, whether it be toxic debt mortgages, or common stocks, etc.  

And the Fed is not 'unprinting' anything, until it either writes off the debt, or return it to its issuer.  The Fed is a private corporation.  You can say that the Fed withdraws the liquidity from the market place by keeping it relativelhy inactive because the Fed does not purchase many things, but even that is no longer the case.  The Fed has grown into quite the organization, with its own police force.  It merely surrenders any 'profits' remaining after all its discretionary expenses back to the Treasury.

If this was such a simple and benign swap why else would they do it? It is one of the primary levers the Fed uses to influence monetary policy.

They are increasing and changing the character of the money supply in the course of managing it. It is what they do for God's sake, besides riding herd on their banks who normally create the money for them, but occasionally get derailed by some financial bubble of their own creation.

7) Government spending drives up interest rates and bond vigilantes control interest rates.

Many economists believe that government spending 'crowds out' private investment by forcing the private sector to compete for bonds in the mythical 'loanable funds market.' The last 5 years blew huge holes in this concept. As the US government’s spending and deficits rose interest rates continue to drop like a rock. Clearly, government spending doesn’t necessarily drive up interest rates.

And in fact, the Fed could theoretically control the entire yield curve of US government debt if it merely targeted a rate. All it would have to do is declare a rate and challenge any bond trader to compete at higher rates with the Fed’s bottomless barrel of reserves. Obviously, the Fed would win in setting the price because it is the reserve monopolist. So, the government could actually spend gazillions of dollars and set its rates at 0% permanently (which might cause high inflation, but you get the message).
It is not government spending that drives up interest rates, but that does not mean government spending cannot drive up interest rates. It sure as hell can. 

And I would hope to think that bond vigilantes can help to control interest rates, otherwise the entire Federal Reserve system and the US dollar is based on a fallacy. See what Mr. Bernanke has to say below. This is the confidence on which the dollar rests.

In fact the Fed COULD exercise reserve monopolist powers and print all the money it wishes at zero rates. And the 'vigilantes' could respond by shifting their wealth into other non-dollar instruments, en masse.

What is somewhat confusing is that the relationship is not straightforward, but is a somewhat non-linear dynamic with a lag. You can get away with quite a bit of economic behavior in the short term. But eventually you can reach a tipping point, if there remain enough agents who are free to dissent from the dictates of a central authority that has fallen into error, aka 'vigilantes.'

8) The Fed was created by a secret cabal of bankers to wreck the US economy.

The Fed is a very confusing and sophisticated entity. The Fed catches a lot of flak because it doesn’t always execute monetary policy effectively. But monetary policy is not the reason why the Fed was created. The Fed was created to help stabilize the US payments system and provide a clearinghouse where banks could meet to help settle interbank payments.
...So yes, the Fed exists to support banks. And yes, the Fed often makes mistakes executing policies. But its design and structure is actually quite logical and its creation is not nearly as conspiratorial or malicious as many make it out to be.

This is reductio ad absurdam. The Fed is not a monster or inherently evil. But that does not make it good.

The Fed was created in somewhat extraordinary circumstances, wrapped in political secrecy in the aftermath of a banking crisis.  And it was driven by a small group of powerful men who united to promote a common purpose.  I will not speak to their motives.

There is a long controversy about the proper role of a central bank in the US, going back to its very founding, and this treatment makes light of that.

It is a great power to create and distribute money, that can be used for good or ill. And therefore it must be constrained, and subject to oversight. And history shows that this power is frequently abused.

9) Fallacy of composition.

The biggest mistake in modern macroeconomics is probably the fallacy of composition. This is taking a concept that applies to an individual and applying it to everyone.

Could not agree more, especially if you extend it to anecdotal information. But I would tend to refer to it as the fallacy of reasoning from the particular to the general.  But I would not call it 'the biggest.'

One of the most perennial myths is that a skill in making money, especially through financial speculation, is the sign of wisdom in other things.  Some of the best traders I have known are borderline savants and white collar criminals, whom I would hardly trust to handle my family's future. 

Alas, wealth and beauty are not always companions of virtue in this world.  They become accustomed to obsequiousness, and lose site of their common humanity.  And there is nothing sadder or more tedious than a man who has become wealthy, who decides to grace the public with his wisdom, bad haircut and all. 

I think a more pernicious and prevalent economic myth is the notion that economics can dictate public policy through some appeal to economic laws as if they were physical laws like gravity. Public policy is best decided by determining goals and priorities and then allowing many things, including economics, to shape the implementation of that policy.

But economics has been elevated to a position in our societies which is wholly inappropriate and a source of great mischief, especially when the truly dangerous myths like 'naturally efficient markets' become the basis for policy decisions without proper regard for their effects. The 'austerity for the sake of the public while sustaining corrupt practices' myth is perhaps the most cruel and appalling.

10) Economics is a science.

Economics is often thought of as a science when the reality is that most of economics is just politics masquerading as operational facts.
Economics is a social science, and not a physical science. There are plenty of facts, and somewhat ironically Mr. Cullen has just leaned heavily on quite of few of the ones he tends to favor, whether they are right or not.  

The worst of it is when economics is used by those who claim an 'authority' from it to promote policies that are quackery, as we have seen all too much in the past twenty years in particular with regard to the natural goodness of the power of 'the Market.'

What concerns me though is the follow on to this declaration of  the myth of economics as science. It is that extreme resort of relativism which holds that since economics is all bullshit, why not use it, and shamelessly, to promote a particular point of view, wrapping it in as much jargon and intimidating hoo hah as you can manage?  Since there is no science, there are no necessary consequences, and we may do as we please.  And that is a sophistry of the first order.

And this view is being promoted by the economists themselves, those few members of a 'disgraced profession' like accountants and regulators, who were willing to say and do almost anything for the promise of money, favors, and political connections.

And this deterioration in professional standards has long been my objection to much that has been said and is being said about money by these most modern of thinkers, caught up in the will to power, who believe that since there is no god of consequences, then everything is lawful.  

They lose their grounding in the reality of commerce and risk, and start throwing around harebrained notions like 'platinum coins.'  They bring the childish politics of their academic departments to weigh in on serious policy decisions with serious real world consequences.

Even a few faux Nobel laureates have been seen to join in this Dionysian dance, a filigree of modern monetary contrivance.  Skip the coin, default, and be damned if you will, but a old fish wrapped in silk is still a dead and stinking fish.

Speaking about money, It is worth reading what Mr. Bernanke has written about money in this essay below.  It speaks volumes. 

"What has this got to do with monetary policy? Like gold, U.S. dollars have value only to the extent that they are strictly limited in supply. But the U.S. government has a technology, called a printing press (or, today, its electronic equivalent), that allows it to produce as many U.S. dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost.

By increasing the number of U.S. dollars in circulation, or even by credibly threatening to do so, the U.S. government can also reduce the value of a dollar in terms of goods and services, which is equivalent to raising the prices in dollars of those goods and services. We conclude that, under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and hence positive inflation.

Of course, the U.S. government is not going to print money and distribute it willy-nilly (although as we will see later, there are practical policies that approximate this behavior). Normally, money is injected into the economy through asset purchases by the Federal Reserve.

To stimulate aggregate spending when short-term interest rates have reached zero, the Fed must expand the scale of its asset purchases or, possibly, expand the menu of assets that it buys.

Alternatively, the Fed could find other ways of injecting money into the system--for example, by making low-interest-rate loans to banks or cooperating with the fiscal authorities. Each method of adding money to the economy has advantages and drawbacks, both technical and economic.

One important concern in practice is that calibrating the economic effects of nonstandard means of injecting money may be difficult, given our relative lack of experience with such policies. Thus, as I have stressed already, prevention of deflation remains preferable to having to cure it.

If we do fall into deflation, however, we can take comfort that the logic of the printing press example must assert itself, and sufficient injections of money will ultimately always reverse a deflation."

Ben S. Bernanke, Deflation: Making Sure 'It' Doesn't Happen Here

07 January 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Song Remains the Same


There was little consequential movement of bullion in the Comex warehouses yesterday.

Paper claims on deliverable Comex gold remains historically high at 80 to 1.

This is a Non-Farm Payrolls week, so we ought to be watchful for antics.

The growing gap between the paper gold and physical gold markets is going to catch quite a few people off balance at some point. It could be a long wait, but it is still fun to watch them go through their song and dance routines in the meantime.  

Have a pleasant evening.






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Same Old, Same Old


The FOMC Minutes tomorrow afternoon might be interesting, divisiveness-wise.

Other than that, how many ways can you say low volume technical trade? Because that is what we are seeing.




 

06 January 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Non-Farm Payrolls For December Later This Week


There was intraday commentary on the early morning bear raid here.

This is a Non-Farm Payrolls week, in the non-active month of January.

There was no movement in or out of the Comex warehouses.




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Low Volume Monkeyshines


The big tickle will be the Fed minutes and the Non-Farm Payrolls this week.






NAV Premiums of Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - First Gold Halt of 2014


Nanex documents the first trading halt in gold, and the first smash-and-grab bear raid of 2014, here.
"On January 6, 2014 at 10:14:13, Gold futures plummeted $30 on heavy volume. About 4,200 contracts send gold futures prices tumbling $30 and trigger a 10 second trading halt. "

1. February 2014 Gold (GC) Futures


05 January 2014

Comex Warehouses: Potential Claims On Deliverable Bullion at Historically High 80 to 1


“When you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something about it, when you cannot express it in numbers, your knowledge is of a meager and unsatisfactory kind; it may be the beginning of knowledge, but you have scarcely, in your thoughts, advanced to the stage of science.”

William Thomson Lord Kelvin

I think we can stipulate that the lack of real transparency in the precious metals markets, among too many other markets, is appalling. But that is the nature of our fraudulent times.

January is a non-active month for the metals, and overall inventories are adequate for the meager deliveries on the Comex.

Those who hold bullion will need some incentive to move it to the deliverable, registered category for February, which is often a significant physical delivery month for the New York paper markets.

But all in all, the Comex is now the tail wagging the dog, a paper sideshow to the real bullion markets which are moving East.

This is something that very few economists have yet to internalize.



04 January 2014

Weekend Reading


"...Surely, there is at this day a confederacy of evil, marshalling its hosts from all parts of the world, organizing itself, taking its measures, enclosing the church of Christ as in a net, and preparing the way for a general apostasy from it. Whether this very apostasy is to give birth to Antichrist, or whether he is still to be delayed, we cannot know; but at any rate this apostasy, and all its tokens, and instruments, are of the Evil One and saviour of death.

Far be it from any of us to be of those simple ones, who are taken in that snare which is circling around us! Far be it from us to be seduced with the fair promises in which Satan is sure to hide his poison!

Do you think he is so unskillful in his craft, as to ask you openly and plainly to join him in his warfare against the truth? No; he offers you baits to tempt you. He promises you civil liberty; he promises you equality; he promises you trade and wealth; he promises you a remission of taxes; he promises you reform.

This is the way in which he conceals from you the kind of work to which he is putting you; he tempts you to rail against your rulers and superiors; he does so himself, and induces you to imitate him; or he promises you illumination, he offers you knowledge, science, philosophy, enlargement of mind. He scoffs at times gone by; he scoffs at every institution which reveres them.

He prompts you what to say, and then listens to you, and praises you, and encourages you. He bids you mount aloft. He shows you how to become as gods. Then he laughs and jokes with you, and gets intimate with you; he takes your hand, and gets his fingers between yours, and grasps them, and then you are his."

J.H.Newman, The Times of Antichrist

03 January 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Release from the Year End Clamp Down


There was quiet trading as the northeastern US was digging its way out of Winter Storm Hercules.

Gold and silver have been rallying since the end of the December clamp down, but they most certainly have not yet broken out on the charts.

About 2700 ounces found their way out of the deliverable Comex inventory, bringing it back down to the 480,440,000 ounce level which is historically quite low.  This ought not to be an issue until the February delivery period arrives.  

There is sufficient gold in the Comex, but it might require higher prices to shake it loose.  As for the overall global supply situation for bullion, that is another story altogether.

See you next week.  Once again, Happy New Year!






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Low Volume


Very low volume and somewhat boring day, as the end of year exuberance continued to drip off the tape.

One area of interest was the minor divergence between the SP and Big Tech. The SP is the locus of stock market
propping by the ESF, so we'll have to see how it deals with key support levels next week.

Have a pleasant weekend.




Ted Butler: 2013 – The Year of JP Morgan in the Precious Metals


Here is a very brief excerpt from Ted Butler's summary look at the precious metals market in 2013.

I find it interesting in particular because Ted watches all the Comex data closely, and builds his thesis on that.

Although his commentary is normally by subscription, he has made the entire piece for free here.

As a bullion bank and market maker JPM may have some explanations for what they are doing, and it may be perfectly innocent. If they provide them to the CFTC, I think it would be something that could well be made public.

I do not mean to be rude, but a mere reassurance that they are doing no wrong is hardly sufficient, given the many recent instances in which they have been found to be doing things that are wrong, even if they are able to settle them for money and technically admit no guilt. I believe Matt Taibbi recently referred to them as "a global criminal enterprise."

But the CFTC makes an unresponsive silence their usual policy on far too many market particulars. And that undermines market confidence. And it is an arrogance of government power that makes it clear why only a small minority of people have a favorable view of the current government in Washington for both parties.

The people should be able to have confidence in markets for them to operate efficiently, and it is the role of government to provide this oversight. This is what they are paid to do, and the taxpaying public, not the Banks, are their customers.

And that may be at the heart of our dilemma, a credibility trap. No credible action will be taken to reform because the excesses and abuses implicate the power elite, and their courtiers and enablers.

"From the very beginning of the year to the last two days of 2013, JPMorgan has dominated and controlled the price of silver and gold. Here are the documented facts. At the start of 2013, with gold at $1650 and silver at $30, JPMorgan held short market corners in COMEX gold and silver futures. JPM was short 75,000 gold contracts (7.5 million oz) and 35,000 silver contracts (175 million oz).

JPMorgan’s short market corners at the start of 2013 amounted to a 21% net share of the entire COMEX gold futures market (minus spreads) and an astounding (but typical) 35% of the entire COMEX silver market. No single entity had ever held such outsized and anti-competitive shares of any important regulated futures market. It is unreasonable not to associate such extreme market corners with what followed in price."