The Central Gold Trust shelf offering will complete next Wednesday, 23 June.
On fading Jeff Christian and Jonny Nadler
Stay thirsty my friends.
"As it was in the days of Noah, so shall it be with the coming of the Son of man. In the days before the flood, they were eating and drinking, marrying and being given in marriage, even to that very day in which Noah entered into the ark. They did not know what was happening, even as the flood came and swept them all away." Matthew 24:37-39
The Central Gold Trust shelf offering will complete next Wednesday, 23 June.
On fading Jeff Christian and Jonny Nadler
Stay thirsty my friends.
Charts from 10:30 New York time this morning. As a reminder tomorrow is the stock options 'quad witching' expiration.
Stocks look overdue for a pullback, with 1100 providing a key support, and below that around 1090. We're back on the 'short stocks / long gold' trade as of yesterday, believing that the stock rally was artificial and support for the IPO's rolling out under the careful guidance of Mother Goldman.
"In today’s exchanges, strong programs prey on weak ones, humans are hard to find, and the SEC struggles to keep up."
Monsters in the Market, the Atlantic, July 2010
A bubble is a significant increase in valuation supported by a set of artificial, inexplicable, and otherwise unsustainable conditions. The 'increase in valuation' can be nominal as in a price that goes 'higher' without a corresponding increase in value, or a decline in the value underlying the asset while the price remains nominally the same. (note 1)
True bubbles almost always involve some element of secrecy, a cover up, and some dispensation from common knowledge and experience. There are almost always dissenters, voices of warning, that are ignored and even ostracized. "It's different this time..." without there being an identifiable difference, only the self referential rationale.
Stocks are not a bubble because they are going higher and the market is infallible. Housing cannot be a bubble because the housing market is so geographically diverse. You get the point. Not all things that increase in price are a bubble, but this does not mean that bubbles cannot be identified. They can, but when they serve some greater end, the voices of dissent are overwhelmed. Almost all bubbles involve control frauds and the corruption of the media, the analysts, and the regulators, to some degree, through benefits and intimidation.
When the artificial conditions are removed the valuation of the bubble 'reverts to the mean, ' a more normal valuation based on the fundamentals, unadjusted and undistorted supply and demand. An asset bubble often involves a fraudulent design taking advantage of and even perpetuating a corresponding foolishness. In other words, the fraud is father to the folly.
The duration of a bubble does not make it valid or 'the new normal.' Like most chronic conditions it just means that the adjustment will be all the more difficult.
The US dollar as the world's reserve currency, and the unusual period of US prosperity, is an historical artifact of the post World War II era that will not continue indefinitely. When the reversion to the mean occurs, it is likely that the dollar will have to be reissued as 'the new dollar' similar to the rouble in the post-Soviet adjustment. I can think of few better examples of what the US faces than the collapse of the former Soviet Union. For the UK, it looks like Argentina, or Iceland writ large, but with the sharp edge of a police state.
This is my fundamental currency thesis that I have been following since 1997, and it appears to be valid so far. I do not see the resolution in hyperinflation per se, but I do think the new dollar will have a value of about 10% of the current dollar. I think a hyperinflation requires a loss of confidence against some external standard. So the object is to weaken any that might appear.
At some point they will merely knock a zero off the current dollar and demand their surrender for new dollars. That should play havoc with those holding large bundles of 'cash.' For example, if you have $100,000 in savings, and it will afterwards be worth 10,000 in new dollars.
Eliminating 90% of its foreign debt obligations will certainly help to repair the US Balance Sheet. It is possible that this is accomplished in inflation, rather than a more formal evaluation, and over a long period of time, say twenty years or so.
If this seems impossible to you, then you are not aware perhaps that the same thing was accomplished from 1933 to 2000, or 67 years, and should avoid looking at the last chart. The Fed was merely squandering the nation's wealth, without the advantages of modern financial engineering and deregulation. The next leg down will probably be about three times more efficient, under the leadership of Zimbabwe Ben.
Chart from the latest ScotiaCapital FX Presentation
"Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored." Aldous HuxleyWouldn't it be convenient for the oligarchs if their think tanks could somehow concoct a story, some plausible sounding theory, to persuade a portion of the world's population to hold dollars, expecting them to GAIN in value, even in the face of significant defaults and credit failures and a deteriorating return in GDP growth per marginal dollar debt? Or even better, getting them to remain fully invested in a series of artificially contrived dollar denominated financial assets that could be selectively 'pulled down' while keeping the overall scheme intact and running. Bernays would be proud.
The Central Gold Trust was pressured today in response to its new unit offering from the existing shelf prospectus. The price declined 3.67% from yesterday's close with gold down $7.10. The total placement will be $285 million.
The premium is now low enough to make one an interested buyer, all things being equal, if there is an optimistic outlook for gold.
I have not quite calculated the 'greenshoe' on this offering as I am otherwise occupied today, but it might involve shortselling ahead of the offer as is customary and explained here.
Press Release
CENTRAL GOLD TRUST
For Immediate Release to Canada News Wire and U.S. Disclosure Circuit
TORONTO, Ontario (June 16, 2010) - Central GoldTrust of Ancaster, Ontario announced today that it has entered into an underwriting agreement with CIBC World Markets Inc., as lead underwriter, and Credit Suisse Securities (Canada), Inc. (the “Underwriters”), under which the Underwriters have agreed to buy and sell to the public in Canada (except Québec) and in the United States under the multijurisdictional disclosure system, 5,730,000 Units of Central GoldTrust.
The Underwriters have been granted the right to increase the size of the offering (the “Right”) by up to an additional 1,000,000 Units, exercisable in whole or in part, at any point prior to 4:00 p.m. (EST) on June 16, 2010. The offering will be made under an initial prospectus supplement to Central GoldTrust’s US$800,000,000 base shelf prospectus dated June 8, 2009.
The purchase price of U.S. $48.90 per Unit is expected to result in gross proceeds of approximately U.S.$ 280 million, prior to the exercise of the Right.
Substantially all the net proceeds of the offering have been committed to purchase gold bullion for settlement at closing, in keeping with the asset allocation provisions outlined in Central GoldTrust’s Declaration of Trust and the related policies established by its Board of Trustees. Any additional capital raised by the offering is expected to assist in reducing the annual expense ratio in favour of all Unitholders of Central GoldTrust.
Closing is expected to occur on or about June 23, 2010.