02 November 2013

Comex Deliverable Gold Falls to 658,443 Ounces, Claims Per Deliverable Ounce at 55


There was a change in status of 48,652 ounces of gold bullion in the JPM warehouse which were withdrawn from the registered to the eligible category.  Apparently someone had a change of heart.

Big change of heart.  About one and half tonnes worth.

The claims per ounce of deliverable gold stand at 55.  As I have explained before, this is a metric, a way of measuring inventory against potential ownership.

Like the velocity of money or a speedometer on a car it does not do anything.  But it does provide information that can be quite useful if you are interested in where you are and where you might be going.

But it is a measure of some related things with meaning. And one that apparently annoys some who would rather not notice it now that it is at an extreme reading.  Extremely low readings of deliverable gold relative to demand generally mark a trend change in price within six months.

And that makes sense.  It will take higher prices to move more of that gold out of the eligible to the deliverable category, the antics of JPM notwithstanding.

But in the meanwhile quite a bit of gold has been draining away from the West to chase the premiums for delivery in the East.  The offtake in the Comex and the GLD ETF have been remarkable, not seen in any of the other precious metals.

This does not strike some people as odd.  And that is understandable.  The really big changes, what are called sea changes, always catch most of the people unawares and tosses them for a loss.  And experts are not exempt, not at all, because they often become lost in the familiar.  I think we have seen that most recently in the financial crisis that so many economists failed to see coming even as it rolled over the economy.

And then there is the 'investment' activity of the western Central Banks with their nation's gold reserves.  The obligations must weigh heavily.

I find it quite interesting that there is a new scandal brewing in the FX markets involving price rigging.   It is odd how the Banks have been caught rigging so many markets, but when it comes to precious metals, the apologists find all sorts of odd behaviour to be quite innocent and above reproach.

We are approaching the time when those who have will throw down, and those who have not, will fade away.  I do not see the future as inevitable.  But I do believe that there will be a reckoning of sorts. There always seems to be.

Weighed, and found wanting.

Stand and deliver.









01 November 2013

Moyers: The top Secret Trade Deal You Need To Know About





Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - All Saints


"Man has places in his heart which do not yet have life, and into them enters suffering, in order that they may be born...There is only one great sadness in life, at the very last, not to be a saint."

Léon Bloy, The Woman Who Was Poor

There was a fairly blatant hit on the metals for the first day of November.

There was a significant adjustment of gold bullion out of the deliverable category and into eligible storage, in the JPM warehouse of course. I shall post something about that late tonight.

Otherwise it was the same old, same old.  I used this latest smack down to backfill positions I had released on that last stab higher in price.   Now we will have to wait and see.

Can Joan's dad let me know how she is doing?  I remember her daily.

Have a pleasant weekend.





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts


Stocks had a drift upwards today.

The bulls smell the end of year now that it is November.

Bloomberg TV was touting industrials as the way to play this into year end, despite a big gain for the year already.

I doubt we will see any substantial QE taper until well into next years, but it is a nice theme to play against the short term 'wash and rinse' that is so popular amongst traders.

I do not now see any significant correction until year end UNLESS there is some 'event' that provokes a sell-off. If there is such an event the market has a thin underpinning and may get some downside traction relative to the size and significance of any event.

But that is a long shot bet.

Have a pleasant weekend.