18 November 2013

SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - May the Odds Be Ever In Your Favour


The spokesmodels of Bloomberg TV were wondering why Jon Corzine is being annoyed by the little people with these lawsuits. After all, didn't everyone get paid back?

Why are people so 'litigious' these days asks the pampered princess. They just must be bitter for some reason.

Yes, opines the visiting village idiot, people sold at the bottom during the financial crisis, and now they are just envious and angry, and taking their bitterness out on poor Jon Corzine.

You cannot make this stuff up. It is right out of The Hunger Games. And people wonder what the JPM people were thinking when they opened the twitter gates to the barbarian hordes of the disgruntled. They just do not get it.

Have a pleasant evening.






John Law and the Mississippi Bubble

NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds




15 November 2013

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Claims Per Ounce at 69 to 1


Nothing much of note in the metals today as they continued to bump into overheard resistance.

There was little movement of gold bullion in or out of the Comex warehouses.

I had asked Nick Laird of Sharelynx to check his figures and it turns out that the 'claims per ounce' from yesterday were a bit light at 63.  That did seem very little for a 51,000 ounce change in registered inventory.

A corrected chart is shown below. 

We are at an all time record of 69 potential claims for each ounce of deliverable gold.

Koosjansen has a new update on 'West To East Gold Distribution'

Have a nice weekend.


 





SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Up Up Up


This was the sixth week of gains on the SP 500 as VIX slumped near the yearly low.

The perception is set that Janet Yellen will maintain an exceptionally accommodative policy at the FOMC.

Have a pleasant weekend.






14 November 2013

Comex Registered Gold Falls To 587,235 Ounces - Claims at 63 to 1 - The Karma of Buddha's Palm


There was a rather large adjustment into eligible gold storage at the HSBC warehouse as 51,617 ounces left the deliverable 'registered' category.

This is not such a big short term issue since November is a' non-active delivery month' for the Comex precious metals futures markets.

But in fact there is so little actual physical delivery activity taking place there anymore, even in an 'active month,' that one might argue that the New York metals market is approaching practical insignificance, long before it can reach the storied permanent backwardation.

However, one must keep up appearances, since the Comex still effectively sets the metals price for much of the free world, if only aspirationally these days for Asia.

More charts will be added as they are updated later this evening.

Earlier today in a piece about price premiums in India I included a link to the online section of Charles Mackay's Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds.

You might want to have a quick glance over the chapter regarding John Law's highly innovative dalliance into the théorie monétaire moderne that was adopted by the nation of France, almost to the point of its demise.  It is a useful reminder that truly, there is nothing new under the sun.

As theoretical as all these pricing antics and market manipulations might seem, exercises in price setting for personal greed or policy considerations have real world consequences, especially when they are applied over long periods of time, and with some resort to coercion.

The longer that valuations are maintained against the market, the stronger the coercion to sutain them must become, to the demise of freedom, and the point of exhaustion and collapse.   The Soviet ruble is a possible case study for what happens when the unsustainable meets the inevitable, even with a hairy knuckled police state backing it up. 

We might start thinking about 2014 as the year of financial consequences.

Weighed, and found wanting.

Stand and deliver.