I WILL ROUT YOU OUT!!!

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Posted on 18th June 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Harvey Organ Comments on the Gold Inventory at the COMEX

Time to send a distress flare to their friends and cohorts at the central banks?

Hey Rocky. Watch me pull a rabbit out of a hat.

From Harvey Organ this evening:

“Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a three-fold problem:

i) the total dealer inventory of gold  is at a very dangerously low  level of only 44.32 tonnes, and none of the 9.5 tonnes delivery notices from May and the 30 tonnes from June have been removed from inventory as of yet.

ii.a)   JPMorgan’s customer inventory remains at an extremely low 136,380 oz. If you are a customer of JPMorgan and have your gold in its vault, I think it is best to remove it before we have another fiasco like MFGlobal.

ii.b)  JPMorgan’s dealer account rests tonight at 413,000 oz.  However all of this gold has been spoken for plus an additional 81,000 oz

iii) the 3 major bullion banks have collectively only 30.08 tonnes of gold left!”

I do not watch the Commitments of Traders and the broad sweep of inventory levels like Harvey and others do.

As you know I do not think that this is where the scheme breaks, except as a secondary effect perhaps.  The COMEX is a paper shell game.  The real fireworks will begin more likely in a run on the bullion banks, and the depletion of physical supply sparked by some major scandal or failure to deliver.

Keep an eye on silver.  The central banks don’t have any.

And do not think for a moment that this will go down easily.  There are desperate but powerful forces at work.

But I do enjoy watching this sort of thing unfold.

“You are a den of vipers and thieves. I have determined to rout you out, and by the Eternal, (bringing his fist down on the table) I will rout you out!”

President Andrew Jackson, February 1834, from Andrew Jackson and the Bank of the United States (1928) by Stan V. Henkels

 

Posted by Jesse

Is Gold At A Turning Point?

1 comment

Posted on 13th June 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Submitted by Adam Taggart of Peak Prosperity blog,

There’s no way to sugarcoat the dismal performance of the precious metals in recent months. But a revisitation of the reasons for owning them reveals no cracks in the underlying thesis for doing so.

In fact, there are a number of new compelling developments arguing that the long heartbreak for gold and silver holders will soon be over.

A Hard Look in the Mirror

The past two years have not been kind to holders of the precious metals. The price of gold is down over $500/oz since the record high (nominal) price it hit in August of 2011. That’s a decline of 28%. Silver has seen a decline of 56% over the same period.

A healthy amount of that decline came in the past seven months, which have pretty much seen a steady price deflation punctuated by sharp (and historic) downdrafts:

On top of these grim charts, daily headlines touting, often with delight, the demise of gold appear nearly everywhere in the media.

 
 

And forget about PM mining stocks. They have been absolute widow-makers for investors:

(Source)

It’s hard to argue that PM mining stocks aren’t the most hated sector in today’s markets. The chart below shows that last month, the bullish sentiment on gold miners dropped to 0%. Can’t go any lower than that:

Wasn’t reckless central-bank money printing going to flood the world with paper currency, sending gold prices and those of its “poor man’s” sister, silver to the moon? Weren’t the markets going to crack as the unresolved economic and financial rot in the U.S., EU, and Japanese systems became further exposed, sending capital fleeing into the bullion market and driving prices much, much higher? Weren’t escalating mining costs going to march up the price floor for the precious metals?

Why haven’t any of these scenarios happened? Were we wrong in our reasons for purchasing gold and silver?

Are we the clueless patsy at the poker table?

The Way of the World

These are very understandable questions to be asking. You wouldn’t be human if you didn’t.

So, it’s wise to return to the #1 lesson of investing: Never fall in love with your positions. Be sure to question your rationale regularly and often. Remove emotion from your decision-making, look to what the data tells you, and continually ask yourself: Ignoring my past decisions, would I purchase this investment today? If the answer is no, lightening up your position is almost always the right decision.

Chris and I follow the precious metals markets on a daily basis, and we frequently challenge the logic behind our support of them. But at this time, we can find nothing nothing that has happened over the past two years that invalidates the principal reasons we’ve laid out for owning precious metals. You can review these reasons in detail on our foundational report, The Screaming Fundamentals for Owning Gold & Silver.

The hard truth for us investors is that secular market trends take time to play out. Nothing moves in a straight line. And they are many false signals along the way. There are no sure bets, no risk-free winning options to pick.

But the good news is that the laws of physics and rationality always prevail in the end. If you can identify the right endgame and position yourself for it patiently, the messy volatility along the way really won’t mean much in the big picture.

But Has Anything Really Changed?

Let’s look at the key reasons why we originally recommended that investors look to the precious metals as a safeguard:

  • Negative real interest rates
  • Fiscal deficit spending and unserviceable sovereign debts
  • Loose, if not reckless, monetary policies
  • The price of newly mined ounces continues to climb higher and higher, due both to reduced ore grades and higher costs for fuel and equipment.

Negative real interest rates have always been supportive of gold prices. While admittedly that’s not been the case for the past two years, we now see that historic relationship re-expressing itself.

After all, when the return on cash savings is virtually nothing and the money printers are running, inflation eats away at fiat purchasing power. Gold, as money, offers protection from this.

Perhaps things are different this time, but we’re thinking not.

The degree of fiscal and monetary recklessness has taken us by surprise, both for the intensity of the actions already taken, but also for the fact that financial markets have adjusted to the practices and now treat them as normal, if not desirable. While the U.S. deficit has been declining from its record highs, much of that is due to accounting shenanigans, all while our dangerously high debt-to-GDP ratio (as well as those of most other developed countries) continues to worsen.

Mining costs have been on a steady march upwards over the past decade, setting an average “all-in” cost floor now very close to the current price of gold:

Even exploration costs have skyrocketed, which, importantly, is happening in parallel with a marked decrease in discovery volumes: 

(Source)

Gold, it seems, is getting both harder to find and harder to get out of the ground.

And to the above list of original fundamentals, we must sadly add several new drivers:

  • MF Global proving that client accounts can be looted and then drawn into a lengthy and unsatisfying bankruptcy/creditor process
  • Cyprus proving that the banking system intends to make depositors pay for its mistakes
  • Politicians openly calling for various wealth taxes to be levied on anybody who has managed (dared? bothered?) to save up funds

And one last big one: a new secular change in rising interest rates that threatens to create havoc in world economies and financial markets across the world.

(Source)

After a decade of low and declining interest rates, yields are back on the rise. The low cost of debt that the markets have become used to has created a worldwide bubble in bond prices, about which experts like Bill Gross have been increasingly vocal in issuing dire warnings. A popping of this bubble will increase borrowing rates for governments/business/consumers, depress home prices, make mortgages more expensive, and basically act like kryptonite to any “recovery” in the world economy.

Wall Street has certainly taken notice. And it’s worried about the implications:

 
 

In a Shift, Interest Rates Are Rising (The New York Times)

“I think you all should be ready, because rates are going to go up,” Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, told a financial industry conference at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Manhattan on Tuesday.
 
As investors brace themselves for a new era of higher interest rates, global markets in bonds, currencies and stocks have experienced spasms of turmoil.
 
 

Bond bubble threatens financial system, Bank of England director warns (the guardian)

A key Bank of England policymaker has warned of the risks to global financial stability when “the biggest bond bubble in history” bursts.
“Let’s be clear. We’ve intentionally blown the biggest government bond bubble in history,” Haldane said. “We need to be vigilant to the consequences of that bubble deflating more quickly than [we] might otherwise have wanted.”
 
 

60% chance of global recession: Pimco (CNN Money)

Pimco’s founder and co-chief investment officer, Bill Gross, argued last month that central banks’ ultra low interest rate policies and ongoing bond-buying programs have resulted in a financial system that is “beginning to resemble a leukemia patient with New Age chemotherapy, desperately attempting to cure an economy that requires structural as opposed to monetary solutions.”

Lastly, there is the wild-card possibility improbable, but certainly worth considering because of the gains to be had of gold being re-monetized as a means of balancing and settling international accounts.  Should that transpire, gold will be worth many multiples of today’s value.

The Light at the End of the Tunnel

For all the reasons above, the bruised precious metal investors out there should still sleep well at night, secure that the foundational rationale for holding gold and silver remains intact.

DO YOU SEE A TREND?

8 comments

Posted on 13th June 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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I believe they call this buying when the price is low. Meanwhile, Americans pay 23% more for a house in the desert than they paid last year. And you wonder why we’re losing.

“This strong demand is not trivial: on the one hand it reveals
China’s strategy to exit the dollar and, on the other, its wish to
protect itself from a coming shock and, finally,
the anticipation that the possession of gold must accompany
 
the internationalization of the yuan.” 

– GEAB

MOST CROOKED EVIL FINANCIAL INSTITUTION EVER TO EXIST

9 comments

Posted on 8th June 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Jamie Dimon and JP Morgan are the most evil corrupt scumbags on earth. Dimon’s arrogance and hubris are epic. I pray for his demise. There is a lamppost with his name on it. Anyone who can’t see the massive fraud being committed in the metals markets is just blinded by their own self interest or are a co-conspirator in the fraud. The entire financial system is rigged in favor of the oligarchs. The regulatory agencies and politicians are captured. The endgame will be violent and bloody. 

CFTC Gold and Silver Bank Participation Report – Ted Butler’s Comments

The US Banks have gotten net long of gold in this last report.Here is what Ted Butler had to say about this report today:

“Since the BPR of February 5, the US bank category position (in effect, almost exclusively JPMorgan) has swung by a net 100,000 contracts, from net short 70,000 contracts to net long 30,000 contracts (all rounded). There has never been a move of such magnitude before. Over that same time, the total net commercial short position (in the COT) declined by 113,000 contracts, meaning that JPMorgan accounted for almost 90% of the entire commercial decline. It is not possible for that extreme degree of concentration and market share not to be manipulation, pure and simple.

And here’s the manipulative icing on the cake – JPMorgan was able to flip a net short position in COMEX gold of 50,000 contracts in February to a net long position of 50,000 contracts on a gold price decline of as much as $350. I would submit that the singular purchase of 10 million ounces of gold (worth the equivalent of $15 billion) within four months on a greater than 20% price decline could only be accomplished if the price was manipulated lower by the purchaser. No other explanation would be possible…

JPMorgan’s emergence as the big COMEX gold long changes the dynamic of the gold market. In addition to conclusively proving that this is the most crooked and evil financial institution ever to exist, it confirms the extremely bullish set up for the gold price…

Of course, if JPMorgan can continue to accumulate inventory on lower prices, we will get lower prices temporarily. But having JPMorgan confirmed as being on the long side of gold is a game changer. That’s why I continue to throw money out the window on silver call options.”

I read Ted twice a week for color commentary on the metals markets. Its a subscription service. I tend to take some confidence from what he says about the bullish set up because several other things that I watch carefully are inclining to show the same setup for a serious short squeeze on the funds.

He also had quite a bit to say about silver, which is area of special interest, but you will have to subscribe to read that.
I took my first silver position in a while on Friday and expanded my gold position on that weakness.
Jesse

REHYPOTHECATION NATION

19 comments

Posted on 5th June 2013 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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I wonder what happens when a criminal bank has pledged the same asset to ten different customers and five of them demand the asset back at the same time. Ask Jon Corzine or Bernie Madoff. Jesse has it figured out. Others are figuring it out. Trust is running out. The physical gold and silver do not exist to cover the paper issued by the Wall Street shysters. Our Ponzi scheme financial system is nearing the collapse point. The rats are jumping off the sinking ship.

Comex Gold Registered Ounces Available Nearing All Time Low – The Risk of Rehypothecation

‘What has been will be, what has been done will be done; there is nothing new under the sun.’
Ecclesiastes 1:9

“The commercial world is very frequently put into confusion by the bankruptcy of merchants that assumed the splendour of wealth only to obtain the privilege of trading with the stock of other men, and of contracting debts which nothing but lucky casualties could enable them to pay; till after having supported their appearance a while by tumultuary magnificence of boundless traffic, they sink at once, and drag down into poverty those whom their equipages had induced to trust them.”

Samuel Johnson, Rambler #189, January 7, 1752

‘Registered gold’ is bullion in the Comex warehouse that is available to futures contracts standing for delivery.  There are also  a much larger number of ounces stored, at least according to reports by some organizations, that is ‘eligible’ to be sold,  if the owner of the bullion should decide to place it in the ‘registered’ category.

According to the chart below the number of registered ounces at the Comex are approaching a record low.  That in itself has some significance, but I think the point of this chart is that the registered category typically reaches these low levels at major market bottoms.

Simply put, owners of bullion are not willing to put their bullion up for sale at the paper gold market price set by Comex.  They would rather let it sit in storage and pay fees.

Now, in addition to this, there is quite a bit of controversy and speculation that the bullion banks have been leasing out that customer gold that is being held in storage.

That is what is known as rehypothecating.

Rehypothecating simply means that a financial institution uses an asset that is pledged as collateral or assigned for some specific reason as collateral for another transaction of their own. And these days these rehypothecation schemes tend to go to multiple stages like a daisy chain, or dominos.  Bank A takes a customer asset and lends it out to Bank B.  Bank B uses that same asset as collateral to Bank C.  And Bank C uses that same asset once again.

We saw this first level rehypothecation in the collapse of MF Global.  That company was using customer assets, whether they be cash, financial paper, and even actual bullion, as collateral with other banks, including JP Morgan it appears, to back their own private speculation in the markets.  When the markets turned against them, the collateral was ‘called’ and the scheme collapsed.

What made that rehypothecation particularly odious is that such assets held by a clearing broker are considered untouchable and ‘sacred.’   But as it came out in the aftermath of that scandal, we are indeed in different times with regards to oaths, pledges and obligations in finance.

This is not all that dissimilar in character to the Madoff scheme, which is why it is prohibited.  Customers provided the Madoff fund cash, the front men and Bernie Madoff took their fees, and then that money was committed to pay other fund obligations, notably the returns that investors holding paper obligations were owed if they chose to withdraw them.   Madoff just cut to the chase and did not bother with the investment part of the deal.

So if there is a rehypothecation scheme going, and there is a run on the bullion banks at these prices, as customers refuse to voluntarily offer their bullion for sale, and other sources of supply become exhausted, eventually a ‘market break’ will occur and the scheme will be exposed.

And to complicate matters, it is likely that a significant quantity of gold has been leased out from central banks into these rehypothecation schemes that will not be easily returned.    This would be considered ‘career affecting’ and rather embarrassing to the governments.

 

Like the case of the Madoff fund, many people on the periphery of the transactions knew that there was a likelihood of fraud, and that at the very least, something was wrong.  But it is risky to say or do anything, and very lucrative to keep one’s mouth shut and hope to plead ignorance of the scheme later on.

Conspiracy is hard to prove unless one has ‘smoking gun’ admissions on tape, and too often not even then in this culture of fraud where the professional courtesy of moral hazard is more the rule than the exception.

I should note that even in the endgame stages of the exhaustion of a highly leveraged rehypothecation scheme, a more likely outcome would be to let the price of gold rise, and hope that this tempts new bullion supplies on to the market.  This would allow the cycle of this scheme can go along for another turn of paper selling and price manipulation.

But I would not doubt that they will try and frighten out holders of bullion with more price raids. That scheme eventually fails as the bullion passes into stronger, more sophisticated hands.  And the governments and people of the East are certainly doing their part to make it happen.

So in sum, it will not be the registered inventory at the Comex going to zero that will break this scheme.  Rather the registered inventory at the Comex will fall to zero within the context of a greater break in the scheme and a general run on the bullion banks.  First one or two, and then a rush.  We may continue to see scattered shortages for some time first.  Confidence breaks over a long period of time, and then collapses all at once.

I do think that the spike in gold to 1900 was just such an instance.  And the opposite was tried in the recent price smackdown, because allowing the price to rise puts some of the derivatives bets of the TBTF financiers at risk.

And at this time I think that the crucial turning point in this scheme occurred in 2000-2001 with the selling of England’s gold in an act that became known as ‘Brown’s Bottom.’

I do not think it is a question of  if  this rehypothecation scheme fails, but when.   I should add that I no longer doubt it is a highly leveraged rehypothecation scheme in the precious metals markets, and probably others as well.  The circumstantial and direct evidence is just too persuasive.

Since Germany cannot get its 300 tonnes of sovereign gold back for almost seven years, that tells us that it is a relatively small amount of bullion that is required to collapse this paper pyramid scheme.  And so we are likely in the endgame.

So let’s see what happens.  I think after the worst is exposed, people will remark how obvious it all was.  It will be like the housing bubble, which really was an artifact of the CDO pyramid scheme of mispricing of risk, abuse of collateral, and fraudulent representations of ownership and quality.

The government may try to impose some draconian settlement.  And I think most of the world, and a goodly portion of their own country, will tell them ‘to go shit in their hat,’ as my old boss used to say.  And then the coverup will begin,  the small fry and scapegoats who were involved will be thrown to the wolves, and losses distributed to the innocent.  That is where we are now with the latest credit bubble.

The jokers who are behind these types of schemes are bad enough.  They are just despicable conmen, no matter how one wishes to cover up their schemes with sophisticated words and jargon.   Madoff was simply a thief.  And so were the responsible parties at Enron, MF Global, LIBOR manipulation, and so forth.

 

These schemes of manipulating key prices and commodities is as old as markets, as old as the folly of greed.  The notion that markets are naturally virtuous and self-correcting are a ludicrous and harmful fallacy, generally nurtured by conmen who seek to corrupt them.

But their enablers, those who facilitate the scheme and who defend it too often for the rewards of position and pay, are just as bad.  And that net reaches further and wider, in to the chambers of government and into the halls of universities.

They will be brought to account eventually.  It is for us to see that justice is done in this world in accord with the law.  And if the law is corrupt, it is our duty to work for its reform.

If you have your wealth secured in the right ways and places, you may not be overly affected, except perhaps by anxiety and some scarcities of goods that will pass with time.  Life does go on.

I do think being prepared is a good idea.  But look at those who were ruined by Madoff and MF Global.  If you did not have your money with either of them, you were not affected all that badly.

I tend to think that this scheme too will be circumscribed a bit, through a coverup, and the printing of a virtual moat of paper.  And I think we all know how to deal with even a serious inflation whether we feel confident of it or not.

Those of us who lived through the serious inflation of the 1970′s will remember what it was like.  Those on fixed incomes may suffer and we need to make sure that the pigmen do not take advantage of them, or add to their misery.  This latest crop of demi-gods knows no shame and has little self-restraint.  They are walking occasions of sin.  And they are always with us.  It is just that sometimes we let down our guards, and justice fails.

History repeats, and remarkably so, because we so easily forget what we and our forethers have learned, and succumb to the same old temptations and excesses of the few.

 

 

Posted by Jesse