17 July 2013

NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds


Just another Humprhey-Hawkins day.

Interesting comments from Ben.
• Q: Are You printing money?
• Bernanke: Not literally.

and

• Bernanke: If the Fed were to tighten policy, the economy "would tank."
I particularly enjoyed that first comment, in the light of all the economic sophists who keep insisting that 'the Fed is not printing money.'

With regard to the second, it is QE as far as I can see. And the hedge funds are wriggling on the precious metals hook.

The Gold/Silver ratio is back to 65.

 

Gold Chart Intraday - The Bernanke Dipsy-Doodle and Germany's Gold


As you know Ben Bernanke is giving what is likely to be his last testimony to Congress today as the Chairman of the Fed.

So we see gold doing the old 'wax on, wax off.'

The wiseguys need bullion going into a key delivery month of August at the COMEX. Their registered for delivery inventories are at record lows for this leg of the bull market. Overall inventories are getting thin as well.

Every time this has happened, there has been a marked change in the direction of price, higher.

I found this transcript of Lars Schall's interview with William Kaye to be informative.

The decline in the price of gold coincided with the Bundesbank's request for repatriation as I have shown in the past. I would not be surprised if this gold market operation, which is facilitating the removal of large amounts of gold from the ETFs which I have also documented, is serving the purpose of replenishing the missing gold stocks.

Stand and Deliver: How Germany Disrupted the World Gold Market

It may also take the form of a 'stealth confiscation' which will allow the TBTF bullion banks to get long the metals, and ride them higher.

As some commentators have pointed out, there are big drains of physical metal in the gold ETFs, and comparatively little from the silver.  That is not a mark of 'silver strength,'  but more a sign that the physical gold is in very short supply, whereas silver has a more systemic and longer term supply problem.  This is what I think if one looks at the total picture.  Silver supply on the COMEX is not under immediate pressure.

It will be interesting to watch the hedge funds, who are quite short, try and wriggle out of this one.  They deploy their dependents in the media quite well, but that does not help them provide what they have already sold.  It will be bought back at higher prices.

The wiseguys and their water carriers in the media will try to blame China, which indeed is a recipient of much of this gold, because they are a willing buyer, seeking to trade paper for metal as part of their reserve's plan. But I think they are just a contrarian player in a market managed by the Anglo-American banking establishment. 

As I have noted many times before, there is a 'currency war' underway as the international monetary regime evolves and changes.  And it appears that the wealth of the German people in the form of gold may be serving as cannon fodder as it has been conscripted and deployed.

Change in the monetary system status quo is being resisted by the elite that it has enriched, as it always has been and does still.

So for today, time to shake the ETF tree. Tough times ahead so better sell that gold.

Tut tut, looks like rain.




16 July 2013

COMEX Registered Gold Falls To New Record Low


COMEX Registered Gold fell to a new low even as prices rebounded off the recent bottom.

Total Gold remained steady at just over 7 million ounces.

Included are the key dates for the August Contracts for both gold and silver.









Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts


Gold is holding a key support level so far in its recent rebound off the lows.

The 50 Day Moving Average remains a formidable overhead obstacle.

Physical supply in the west remains tight with two weeks before the August delivery period.




SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts






15 July 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - A Sharknado of Mass Distractions


One of the top stories on Bloomberg TV today was a made for TV science fiction movie called 'Sharknado' which caught some Twitter buzz over the weekend because it was so outrageously bad, what they used to call 'campy' in the manner of badly made movie icon Ed Wood.

It was about a tornado that had picked up sharks, and artfully went about dropping them on unsuspecting people, in full frenzied attack.

During one of the two interviews with the people who made this Syfy shlock show, the Bloomberg anchors got so over the top in their praise and speculation about a sequel and Broadway musical that Tara Reid, an actress not noted for her Solomon-like wisdom, dismissed the anchor's ebullient praise somewhat embarrassedly. She looked pretty wise compared to those frivolous knuckleheads.

Alix Steel did some commentary on the gold market later on that was a veritable Sharknado of misunderstanding about what is happening in the commodity world. Perhaps she can star with Ms. Reid in the sequel.

I was saddened to see the news today that Finance is about to overtake Tech as the most profitable sector in the US economy. This speaks volumes to the foul partnership between Wall Street and Washington that is consuming the real economy with fees and frauds.

The New York - Washington Metroplex reminds me of the Capitol District in the The Hunger Games: removed, intellectually inbred, and increasing irrelevant, like a modern day Versailles.

And may the odds be ever in your favor.