26 September 2012

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Silver Turns It Around - Gold Options Expiration - Ted Butler


As noted in the intraday commentary this is a week with a few key events on the Comex for gold, and so we continued to see the metals under pressure, although silver turned it around quite impressively and reached back up for the 34 handle.

Let's see how we go into gold option expiration and first notice.

Sept. 26 Comex October miNY gold futures last trading day
Sept. 26 Comex September silver futures last trading day
Sept. 27 Comex October gold options expiry
Sept. 28 Comex September gold futures last trading day
Sept. 28 Comex October E-mini gold futures last trading day
Sept. 28 Comex October gold futures first notice day

Ted Butler on J.P.Morgan and silver:
"My allegations in silver are incredibly specific. I believe that JPMorgan, by virtue of a massive concentrated short position in COMEX silver futures, is manipulating the price of silver lower than it would be otherwise. If JPMorgan’s concentrated short position did not exist, the price of silver would be substantially higher. It does not matter if the bank is hedging or engaged in market-making; the mere existence of such an unprecedented large and concentrated short position proves manipulation. That’s a key feature of commodity law and is why the CFTC monitors concentration closely.

For some reason, however, the Commission treats silver differently than other commodities. In addition to ignoring the concentrated short position, it glosses over the results of the concentration on price. Silver witnessed, among other large and uneconomic sell-offs, two distinct sell-offs in 2011, in which the price fell 30% and 35% within a few days. Not one word was heard from the Commission on the two most pronounced sell-offs in modern commodity history. Yet, this week Commissioner O’Malia promised that the Commission was looking into the 4% price decline in oil. A decline in oil of 4% gets same day comment; 35% down in silver is not worthy of any comment. This amounts to a level of discrimination that is not tolerated in society or in regulatory matters.

In addition to being specific, my allegations around JPMorgan manipulating the silver market are consistent and continuous. Four years ago, instead of responding directly to public complaints about JPMorgan’s concentrated short position, the Commission chose to investigate as a way of kicking the can down the road. After four years, the issue remains because JPMorgan’s concentrated short position remains. No one in authority wants to make the issues around this short concentration more transparent; not the CFTC, not the CME, not JPMorgan itself. Transparency is good in principle and for the other guy; but when it comes to silver, not so much..."

Ted Butler, 25 September 2012

As you know I think the CFTC may be caught in a credibility trap with respect to the silver and gold markets. And if so, at some point this is going to break, as a scandal of major proportions.

All the CFTC has to do is to release its findings, and satisfy analysts like Ted Butler with proof that the big short in silver is a genuine hedge. That is their responsibility as the representatives of the public in overseeing the markets.

That they will not do so, that they will not even speak to the issue but continue to be evasive, makes one wonder just what sort of people these are, and what they have to hide.

I read with some cheerfulness today that Europe is using the US markets as a model of what NOT to do, in crafting their new regulations about high frequency trading. The types of 'Dr. Evil' market manipulation practiced in the states is already illegal in Europe, and more importantly, enforced on occasion.

And for New York and London and their contempt for the people, shame.



SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Slouching In To Quarter Close



A quiet day all things considered, with more housecleaning going on in the fundish portfolios as the markets lumber on into the quarter end close.

Let's see if the selling does dry up now, and the paint sprayers switch on and begin to hit the tape.

If 'something happens' all bets are off of course. This is a flimsy market to say the least, about as cynical as it gets.





Robert Johnson: Economists As Marketeers for the Monied Interests


Economics is a disgraced profession because of the actions of a few that were tolerated by many, too often for the sake of grants, appointments, and academic timidity. Careerism.

I would not give many of the Wall Street friendly economists too much credit for an obsession with abstract thinking and even dogmatic blindness, but much moreso a willingly cynical preoccupation with temporal honors, prestige, power, and money handed out by the financial interests in a bubble economy of their own creation.

And there is a fitting emblem for this hubris, the cult of the self, with the long tenure of Alan Greenspan at the Federal Reserve. 

A bureaucrat who is in a position of power for far too long can become a debilitating influence not only on their particular area or department, but on a profession as a whole.  One might think of it as the J. Edgar Hoover syndrome.



Robert Johnson serves as the Executive Director of the Institute for New Economic Thinking (INET) and a Senior Fellow and Director of the Global Finance Project for the Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute in New York.

Johnson is an international investor and consultant to investment funds on issues of portfolio strategy. He recently served on the United Nations Commission of Experts on International Monetary Reform under the Chairmanship of Joseph Stiglitz.

Previously, Johnson was a Managing Director at Soros Fund Management where he managed a global currency, bond and equity portfolio specializing in emerging markets. Prior to working at Soros Fund Management, he was a Managing Director of Bankers Trust Company managing a global currency fund.

Johnson served as Chief Economist of the US Senate Banking Committee under the leadership of Chairman William Proxmire (D. Wisconsin). Before this, he was Senior Economist of the US Senate Budget Committee under the leadership of Chairman Pete Domenici (R. New Mexico).

Johnson was an Executive Producer of the Oscar winning documentary, Taxi to the Dark Side, directed by Alex Gibney, and is the former President of the National Scholastic Chess Foundation. He currently sits on the Board of Directors of both the Economic Policy Institute and the Campaign for America’s Future.

Johnson received a Ph.D. and M.A. in Economics from Princeton University and a B.S. in both Electrical Engineering and Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.