13 February 2014

NAV Premiums of Certain Precious Metal Trusts and Funds - What Are They Thinking?


"The only way to partially explain away why JPM has been allowed to hold such controlling market shares [in gold and silver] is to claim that JPM is either hedging for clients or making markets. But in flipping from a 20% short gold market corner in Dec 2012 to a 20% long market corner 8 months later, the hedging argument goes out the window as it is impossible to reconcile what clients would be shorting so much in December and being long so much 8 months later. Remember, JPMorgan tried the same hedging excuse when the London Whale debacle was first reported, but dropped it immediately when it became obvious that it was nonsense. That leaves market making...

Market making is permitted and encouraged to enhance liquidity and tamp down price volatility, but not to rig prices...If JPMorgan is practicing market making in silver they couldn’t be doing a poorer job..."

Ted Butler, Butler Research LLC, Feb 12, 2014

"If you shut up truth and bury it under the ground, it will but grow, and gather to itself such explosive power that the day it bursts through it will blow up everything in its way."

Emile Zola

I think the whole matter of silver manipulation could have been cleared up if the CFTC had actually released the finding of their five year investigation into manipulation of that market, and stated that they had looked at the hedging and market making closely, found it to be legitimate, and backed it up with some verifiable and conclusive facts.

 But they chose instead to say nothing.  The lack of transparency in the financial system overall is harming confidence, and is morally appalling.

The precious metal cartel is giving up ground, but grudgingly.  We will know that they are defeated when we see them running for their lives, ahead of what is likely to be a memorable break in the paper gold and silver markets.

I do not expect the big insiders to get caught up in this debacle as I have said on numerous occasions. But they will be carrying some big specs and funds out on stretchers.  And perhaps a bureaucrat, politician, and banker or two.

In fact, it is likely that if the scheme is revealed and taken down before a crisis, it will happen because big players started complaining to the regulators.  The market overseers will listen to the financially powerful, if not the public, as had happened in the case of the London Whale.  This is the failure of equal justice, and it will bring down whole governments if it continues.

The gold/silver ratio remains unusually high. The discounts on some of the funds are narrowing and the PSLV premium is getting wider. Their cash level is a bit low, leading one to assume they will once again add to their units in an offering probably later this year, but not too long into it.

They are trying to get through this February delivery period. March may be a different story perhaps. But at the end of the day there will be a reckoning, and the longer this continues the worse it will be.

No scheme such as this can go on forever, no matter how confident they may seem. The cockier they become, the closer the resolution. That is all a part of the bluff, and too often, self-delusion.

12 February 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Baby It's Cold Outside


“But today as then, the great propertied interests and their agents commit the most ferocious crimes in the name of the whole people, and bluff and brow-beat them by lying propaganda."

C.L.R. James, The Black Jacobins: Toussaint L'Ouverture and the San Domingo Revolution

Gold and silver tried to break higher today, with gold leading the way. After an early morning pop up to 1298, the Anglo-American gold cartel brought the water cannons to bear, and pushed it back down to 1292 in the after hours.

Tomorrow a major winter storm is going to have its way with the Northeastern US. The bailout boys will have to wear their mukluks to work, or hired some unemployed to carry them about. But never fear, they'll be there. Thank God for the financial system that they are not too lazy to steal.

Monday is a holiday in the States, so we'll be heading into a three day weekend.

The next option expiration for precious metals on the Comex is February 25th.

There was a little back and forth in storage, but nothing meaningful happened in the Comex warehouses yesterday.

Have a pleasant evening. Don't fall into any snowdrifts on the way to work tomorrow.






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Calm Before the Storm


Snowstorm that is, bringing nearly another foot of snow, with a possible mix of freezing rain and ice, to the NYC - Phila metroplex area tomorrow. We'll have to see if the dampens the enthusiasm of the masters of the universe.

Stocks paused today, digesting their recent gains, as they run to the top of the trend channels.

Tomorrow should bring a little more interesting menu of macroeconomic data for the US.

As a reminder, Monday is a holiday in the States and all the markets will be closed. So we are heading into a three day weekend.

Have a pleasant evening.





The Whining of the Bailout Boys: SEC Whistleblower Gary Aguirre and John Mack


"In an interview on Bloomberg TV, John J. Mack, the former chairman and chief executive of Morgan Stanley, called for an end to the harsh words that have been hurled at Mr. Dimon and Lloyd C. Blankfein, Goldman Sachs's chief executive, over their pay."

CNBC, 11 February 2014

The Bailout Boys
"In 2006, Gary Aguirre, a then-client of GAP [Government Accountability Project] attorneys, rocked the financial world by alleging wrongdoing by Securities and Exchange Commission officials for their failure to not allow a proper investigation to proceed, possibly due to political connections.

Aguirre is a former SEC lawyer who was dismissed by the agency following his attempt to subpoena John Mack – a prominent financial figure who later became the CEO of Morgan Stanley – in an insider trading investigation of Pequot Capital Management, one of the country’s leading hedge funds. Aguirre’s story sparked outrage, a Congressional investigation, and (eventual) vindication by the U.S. Senate.

Aguirre’s battle dates back to June 2005, when he suddenly encountered resistance at the S.E.C. during the course of his investigation of Pequot. A $7 billion hedge fund, Pequot’s CEO was Arthur J. Samberg, another prominent financial figure and longtime friend of John Mack, who preceded Samberg as Pequot CEO. Hedge funds are unregulated private investment funds that typically engage in unconventional investment strategies, such as short-selling.

Prior to that date, Aguirre had been investigating the case for months, issuing over 90 subpoenas without obstruction. When Aguirre recommended that Mack’s testimony be taken under oath, he was told by his supervisor that it would be difficult to obtain approval for the subpoena due to Mack’s powerful “political connections.” Over the course of the next two months, Aguirre’s supervisors refused to allow him to issue Mack a subpoena. Aguirre questioned this decision at every level up the chain of command (including SEC Chairman Christopher Cox), reporting his superior’s behavior and providing evidence supporting his subpoena request.

In September 2005, Aguirre was fired 11 days after being awarded a two-step pay increase....

Aguirre eventually testified again in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee, offering further analysis of the role of proper oversight in regards to hedge funds. More and more evidence emerged supporting Aguirre’s allegations. Finally, the Senate Finance and Judiciary committees released their full report, which completely validated all of Aguirre’s claims. This was a significant victory.

In May 2009, after numerous insider-trading investigations by the SEC, Pequot closed down. Many economists also feel that these large-scale hedge funds had a significant effect on the sub-prime mortgage market’s burst, which led to the current global recession. The S.E.C. continues to be criticized for a lack of internal oversight, as evidence by the Bernie Madoff scandal (which also involved a whistleblower)."

Government Accountability Project, The SEC and Gary Aguirre

Related:
Versailles Watch: John Mack Whines About How Badly Wall Street CEO's Are Treated - Yves
Report Says SEC Erred on Pequot - NY Times
Gary J. Aguire - Wikipedia
Why Isn't Wall Street In Jail: The Notorious Case of Gary Aguirre and John Mack - Taibbi
Mary Jo White's Involvement in the Gary Aguirre Case - Taibbi
Mobsters of Wall Street - Jim Hightower

"Call him a fat cat who mocks the public. Call him wicked. Call him what you will. He is, he says, just a banker 'doing God’s work'."

Times of London, Goldman Sachs and Lloyd Blankfein



11 February 2014

Gold Daily and Silver Weekly Charts - Gold Runs Higher - Vichyssoise


Janet Yellen's testimony today was a bit painful at times, but perhaps it will improve as she becomes more familiar with dancing in the lions' den. Her answer about raising the minimum wage shows her to be a tried and true economic General Pétain, well versed in failure and capitulation to the forces of neo-liberalism.   At least le Maréchal de Vichy had a few moments of greatness, although much earlier in life.

Trickle down stimulus is going to most likely stretch the social fabric to the point of tearing. But its failure is going to have to be demonstrated quite forcefully it seems. Keep an eye on the UK and parts of Europe for early warning signs.

It was interesting to see gold move higher with stocks, with silver moving higher as well, but somewhat sluggishly.  I have a suspicion that this is about gold's February delivery issues and the general shortage of physical gold bullion which is developing.  But only time will tell.

About 26,858 ounces of gold bullion came out of Scotia yesterday, in both categories of storage.  We have yet to see the kinds of deliveries tacked up that the standing and stopped orders suggests, but it looks like there will be no close shaves this month. 

I have marked the key overhead resistance levels for gold in red lines on this chart.  And you will notice that gold is still 'channel bound.'  

Have a pleasant evening.






SP 500 and NDX Futures Daily Charts - Calling Down the Thunder


Initial Claims and Retail Sales might provide some economic grist for the market's mills on Thursday, but for today it was all bullishness as the thin volumes and lack of organic selling let stocks take off on the news that there will be a clear debt ceiling bill up for a vote tonight, and Janet Yellen's pandering to the corporate classes in her testimony today.

Stocks are rising on a tide of misdirected and overly narrow liquidity, compliments of the Federal Reserve which is the tip of the banking cartel.

On a more practical note, another winter storm is expected to sweep through the NYC metro area on Thursday offering some potentially significant snowfall. Let's see if this has any affect on the bull's ardor for more. It may improve the occupancy of Manhattan hotels.

Have a pleasant evening.