Showing posts with label gold suppression. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gold suppression. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Parallel Universe in Gold: Wall Street’s Record Gold Shorts Amidst Rapid Inventory Depletion

If your source of information is only mainstream media, you’d have the impression that gold prices will be headed for the gutters. That's because gold shorts are at a record.

From yesterday’s Bloomberg: (bold mine)
Hedge funds are the least bullish on gold in more than five years as speculation about the pace of money printing by central banks whipsawed prices, driving volatility to a 17-month high.

Money managers cut their net-long position by 9 percent to 35,686 futures and options as of May 21, the lowest since July 2007, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Holdings of short contracts rose 6.7 percent to a record 79,416. Net-bullish wagers across 18 U.S.-traded commodities slid 2.1 percent, as investors became more bearish on coffee and wheat.

Gold’s 60-day historical volatility touched the highest since December 2011 last week and a gauge of price swings for the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest bullion-backed exchange-traded fund, surged 73 percent this year.

Record short contracts from SPDR Gold Trust as of May 23, 2013 (Bloomberg’s chart of the Day)

Another record short contract from COMEX gold. According to Zero Hedge on May 24th “showed that the Comex gold short position grew once again to a new all time high of 79,416 shorts”

In short, Wall Street seem to have repositioned for another assault on gold prices.
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Despite such record shorts, so far gold prices has held. 

Japan’s twin bond and stock market crash appears to have benefited gold over the short run.

As a side note; yesterday the public holiday in the US in celebration of the Memorial Day is the likely reason for the late update from stockcharts.com.

Anyway, the interim short term rebound of the yen coincides with gold’s immediate rally. Notice too that gold prices seems to have formed a “double bottom”

What really interest me is the growing parallel universe in the gold markets, particularly the record pile up in shorts amidst rapidly dwindling physical inventories

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Comex gold via 24 hours gold continues to plunge 

Harvey Organ reports of a sustained hemorrhage in GLD inventories which he calls a “bullion bank run”.

Last week’s withdrawals:
Friday: 2.41 tonnes
Thursday: 1.5 tonnes
Wednesday: 3.01 tonnes
Tuesday: 8.42 tonnes
Monday: 6.91 tonnes
The point is Wall Street appears to be selling what they barely possess.
Wholesale premium/discount to melt on 90% us silver coins
I have repeatedly been pointing out of the widening disparities between real physical gold and Wall Street paper gold since gold’s flash crash in April. The chart above from the Daily Reckoning represents the Premium chart of silver coins (which I use here as a proxy for gold). 

The next point is that while Wall Street detests gold, main street loves gold. Thus falling inventories amidst record shorts only means of an on going transfer process of possession from Wall Street to the Physical real markets.

Yet this comes in spite of the obstacles thrown by some governments.

For instance, the Indian government today vastly expanded its frontlines on her war on gold. Today, the Indian government banned loans on gold funds.

The Reserve Bank of India said on Monday banks would not be allowed to give loans against units of gold exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and gold mutual funds.

As these products are backed by bullion and primary gold, the restriction on grant of loan against gold bullion will be applicable to loan against units of gold ETFs and units of gold mutual funds, the RBI said in a statement.

The RBI also said that while giving loan against gold coins sold by banks, the lenders should ensure that the weight of the coins does not exceed 50 grams per customer
So the Indian government’s sustained assault on gold means official transactions (statistical growth) will be reduced as the black markets take over.

Importantly the Indian government’s brazen siege on gold, which has huge religious and cultural attachment on the Indians, will likely spawn violence in overtime. Apparently like almost all governments, the lessons from history are hardly heeded.

Additionally the robust demand in the physical gold market is being compounded by accumulations by emerging market central banks which have reportedly used the recent crash to add to their reserves.

From another Bloomberg report:
Russia and Kazakhstan expanded gold reserves for the seventh straight month in April, when prices tumbled into a bear market, International Monetary Fund data show. The volume for the Shanghai Gold Exchange’s benchmark cash contract jumped to a three-week high on May 24, while assets in gold-backed exchange-traded products dropped for a 15th week last week.

IMF data showed Turkey, Belarus, Azerbaijan and Greece joined Russia and Kazakhstan in adding gold to reserves last month. Mexico and Canada reduced holdings, the data showed. In China, the volume for cash bullion of 99.99 percent purity rose to 22,455 kilograms on May 24 from 12,521 kilograms on May 23, according to data on the Shanghai Gold Exchange’s website.
Bottom line: When the cabal of Wall Street-insolvent governments find themselves out of physical gold to short or when more people discover of the reality of fractional reserve gold trade used by Wall Street, there will be tremendous repercussions. (As an example: billionaire George Soros' reduced exposure to paper gold which was bandied by media as "bearish for gold" was really a redemption from paper to physical gold)

There will be bankruptcies of institutions who fail to meet required deliveries, perhaps this could have been the plight that led to the closure of the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange. Gold markets will also be emancipated from political interventions and from the collusion to suppress gold prices. Importantly a gold buying panic to cover on such massive shorts.
 

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

First Paper Gold Exchange Casualty? Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange Closes, Settles in Cash

Is the closing of the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange signs of things to come for paper gold exchanges?

The Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange (HKMEx) announces today it has decided to voluntarily surrender the authorisation to provide automated trading services (“ATS”) granted by the Securities and Futures Commission (“the SFC”).

With immediate effect, no new orders may be placed and all open positions will be financially settled at the settlement price determined by HKMEx and its designated clearinghouse.

The voluntary surrender decision was made to enable the Exchange to re-align its strategy with the new industry environment since its trading revenues have not been sufficient to support operating expenses and, as a result, its inability to meet the required regulatory financial conditions.

While trading on the Exchange will discontinue, HKMEx as an organisation will continue to operate with its existing staff, and will focus on developing new products including renminbi-denominated precious and base metals contracts that will better meet customer needs. It also intends to re-apply at an appropriate time for an ATS authorization to launch these products with stronger and more effective market maker programs.

“The favourable conditions under which HKMEx was founded have not changed. Global commodity demand continues to shift towards Asia as the region undergoes sustained growth, presenting great opportunities that we will continue to exploit,” said Barry Cheung, Chairman of HKMEx. “Our priorities now are to protect members’ interests by ensuring effective closing of open positions while strengthening our shareholding base and developing new products that play to our distinctive strengths.”

In closing out the open positions, the Exchange has developed a plan in consultation with the SFC to ensure the process is orderly and that investors are well informed of the matter.
Will more default soon (out of supply shortages)? Things are really getting to be a lot interesting.

Contra Media: George Soros hasn’t been Selling Gold, He’s Buying Mines and Redeeming Physical Gold

Mainstream media likes to promote the supposed bear market in gold by attributing to actions of celebrity investors like George Soros. 

From yesterday’s Bloomberg:
Soros Fund Management LLC lowered its investment in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest bullion ETP, by 12 percent to 530,900 shares as of March 31, compared with three months earlier, a Securities and Exchange Commission filing showed May 15.
Paul Craig Roberts, former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury and former associate editor of the Wall Street Journal, writing at the lewrockwell.com unearths what George Soros’ real position is (bold mine)
You know that gold bear market that the financial press keeps touting? The one George Soros keeps proclaiming? Well, it is not there. The gold bear market is disinformation that is helping elites acquire the gold.

Certainly, Soros himself doesn’t believe it, as the 13-F release issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission on May 15 proves. George Soros has significantly increased his gold holding by purchasing $25.2 million of call options on the GDXJ Junior Gold Miners Index.

In addition the Soros Fund maintains a $32 million stake in individual mines; added 1.1 million shares of GDX (a gold miners ETF) to its holdings which now stand at 2,666,000 shares valued at $70,400,000; has 1,100,000 shares in GDXJ valued at $11,506,000; and 530,000 shares in the GLD gold fund valued at $69,467,000. [values as of May 17]

The 13-F release shows the Soros Fund with $239,200,000 in gold investments. If this is bearish sentiment, what would it take to be bullish?

The misinformation that Soros had sold his gold holdings came from misinterpreting the reason Soros’ holdings in the GLD gold trust declined. Soros did not sell the shares; he redeemed the paper claims for physical gold. Watching the gold ETFs, such as GLD, being looted by banksters, Soros cashed in some of his own paper gold for the real stuff.

The giveaway that Soros is extremely bullish on gold comes not only from his extensive holdings, but also from his $25.2 million call option on junior gold stocks. This is a highly leveraged bet on the weakest gold mines. With high production costs and falling gold price from constant short selling in the paper market, Soros’ bet makes no sense unless he thinks gold is heading up as the short raids concentrate gold in elite possession.
Well isn’t this poop and scoop or the spreading disiformation in order to force prices down and enable unscrupulous practitioners to profit?

Media has been deceptive, while it may be true that Mr. Soros may have reduced ETF holdings, they didn’t say that this was not a result of selling but from paper redemption to physical gold. Mr. Soros has shifted from paper gold and joined the physical real gold markets

And it is important to note that in watching what he does rather than what he says (demonstrated preference), Mr. Soros has been buying up the depressed mining sector both from derivatives (call option) ETFs (GDX) and from direct share ownership.

Media can be so toxic.

Massive Short Covering Prompts for Gold’s Best Day in 11 Months

The precious metals markets have been experiencing extreme volatility. But the pendulum seems to have suddenly shifted towards the bulls

Here is the Reuters: (bold mine)
Gold and silver prices gained nearly 3 percent on Monday after a roller-coaster session that opened with a gut-wrenching dive in silver to its lowest in 2-1/2 years before an abrupt midday turnaround.

After trading lower through most of the day, gold suddenly lurched more than $10 an ounce higher around noon U.S. time, with traders citing a wave of pent-up short-covering after seven consecutive days of losses. Also, COMEX silver futures had plunged more than 9 percent after a big sell order at the open, triggering technical buy signals, they said.
Yet this is one of the very scanty reports that covered gold’s fantastic one-day bounce. 

It looks like most media, whom has been preaching of "the end of the gold bubble" meme, went into a blackout with gold’s single day comeback. 

I know, this may be a short-term dead cat's bounce.

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The chart from the Zero Hedge reveals of the massive intraday swing from a test of the mid-April low to the 3% gain which accounted for as gold’s best day in 11 months

It is interesting to note that gold’s bounce comes amidst a RECORD pile up of Wall Street shorts;

Here is the Bloomberg: (bold mine)
The funds and other large speculators held 74,432 so-called short contracts on May 14, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. That’s the highest since the data begins in June 2006 and compares with 67,374 a week earlier. The net-long position dropped 20 percent to 39,216 futures and options, the lowest since July 2007. Net-bullish wagers across 18 U.S.- traded raw materials rose 1.1 percent to 588,482, led by gains in hogs, corn and cotton.
And this also comes amidst the escalating divergence between the supposedly larger physical markets, but which Wall Street has overpowered through the use of massive leveraged derivatives

More from Bloomberg:
Gold premiums in India, the world’s biggest buyer, more than doubled to $40 an ounce May 15 from $17 to $18 a day earlier, according to Bachhraj Bamalwa, a director at the All India Gems & Jewellery Trade Federation. China’s bullion demand jumped to a record 294.3 tons in the first quarter, the World Gold Council said in a report May 16.
India's remarkable doubling of the premium in just a few days has partly been due to the Indian government's stepped up war on gold

Nonetheless skyrocketing premiums in the physical markets signifies as the accelerating imbalances between very strong demand and an enfeeble supply coming from reluctant sellers (gold prices are determined by reservation price model and not by consumption)

Here is what makes things interesting; what has prompted for the “wave of pent-up short-covering” in the light of the record position of Wall Street shorts, even as Wall Street’s gold inventories has been rapidly depleting?

While the mainstream attributes the rally to superficial "seen" or "rationalized" factors--such as yesterday’s "reversal of the strength in the US dollar" or "weaker stock markets" or “crowded trade”, could it be that increasing demand for physical deliveries from Wall Street serve as the “unseen” or “invisible” factor?

If the latter holds sway, then the current concerted acts of gold suppression by Wall Street-goverment cabal may be losing its energy.

Things are getting to be more and more interesting.

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Why the Indian Government’s War on Gold will Fail

Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council (PMEAC) Chief C Rangarajan has declared that India’s love affair with must be contained. Gold imports must be substantially reduced from 1,000 tonnes a year to 700 tonnes.
The imperative to contain gold import has become urgent. The recent surge in gold demand is however creating some distortions and need to be rolled back to boost growth by reversing the trend of declining financial savings and keeping CAD* within prudent limit by contain gold demand.
*CAD-Current Account Deficit

India’s government has essentially placed the burden of the Indian economy on gold. And in doing so, they justify the reinforced holistic campaign against the precious metal.

Coincidentally, India’s stepped up war on gold comes amidst the ongoing Wall Street incited crash.

The Mineweb’s Shivom Seth wonderfully explains how the campaign against gold by India’s government is being orchestrated through various fronts. 

First India’s government proposes to provide an inflation hedge alternative: government inflation indexed bonds (bold mine)
It could have posed as a model scheme to curtail gold imports. In order to stifle India’s appetite for gold, the government has introduced inflation index bonds. The first tranche amounting to around $364 million (R20 billion) is to be introduced on June 4.

Inflation Indexed Bonds (IIBs) are a new category of debt instruments to be introduced in India, where the coupon and principal amount would be linked to the rate of wholesale price inflation with a lag of four months. The authorities have said the objective of introducing such bonds is to channelise savings into productive sources of instruments from unproductive ones like gold.

Slowly but surely, there seems to be an anti-gold campaign that is at play in India. The concerted effort by the Indian government to discredit gold by imposing several curbs, and channelise consumers away from the precious metal, indicates a desperation that has not gone unnoticed by savvy investors.

“The government is making it too expensive for retailers to sell gold, especially when prices have hit new all-time lows. Retailers are forced to apply hefty mark-up given the new curbs,” said Manohar Kedia, of Kedia Jewellery House.
Government inflation indexed bonds are being forced upon the average Indians, as the Indian government’s onslaught to curb the gold trade has intensified. 

India’s war on gold now covers higher taxes or tariffs and import bans and limits.
Knowing fully well that Indians cannot keep away from gold for long, the Reserve Bank of India first hauled up banks for selling gold coins, then came down hard on gold retailers and bullion houses. Now, they have turned their attention on investors, urging them to invest in debt instruments.

Further, in order to moderate the demand for gold for domestic use, the government has also restricted the import of gold on a consignment basis. A major bullion retailer in Mumbai said this would prove to be a major hurdle for exporters.

For, only those exporting gold jewellery will first have to impose on banks for each consignment, given that banks will henceforth be allowed to import gold only to meet the genuine needs of exporters of gold jewellery.
The Indian government's genuine but unstated objective have been to capture or corral people’s savings, by diverting them into the government regulated or controlled banking system, and use such savings to finance a chronically insatiable and profligate government.


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India's "declining financial savings" has hardly been because of gold but because of rapacious government spending.

India’s government has more than doubled the rate of spending over the past 9 years. Such spending binge has exploded the the government’s budget deficits since 2009. (charts from tradingeconomics.com)


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The intensive growth in food subsidies has been part of the such spending spree, as shown by the chart above from the Reuters. Food subsidies are expected to swell by about 40% in 2014.

The Indian government has been subsidizing many industries. Subsidies according to Wikipedia accounts for 14% of the the Indian economy in 2015 (note: not government budget). 

Yet subsidies has led to huge losses: as much as 39% of subsidized kerosene has been  stolen, and as I pointed out last year, politicians looted food subsidies to the tune of $14.5 billion!

Aside from food subsidies, the Indian government has joined the global bandwagon of stimulating the economy nearly a year ago or in June 2012, with various forms of fiscal spending mostly in infrastructure. Thus the spending ratios should be more today

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Such lavish spending has resulted to expanding the debt.

Even as debt to GDP has been shrinking, the Indian government’s external debt has massively ballooned over the same period. 

This only means that the accrued government spending has been funded by debt acquired from external sources.

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Again the debt to gdp metric is hardly a reliable statistical indicator because the denominator (GDP) can be driven by a credit boom and not by real growth. This is currently the case with India. India’s domestic credit to private sector has reached the highest level ever at 50.6% in 2011. India has an ongoing bubble.

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While India’s foreign reserves remain near record highs, exploding fiscal deficits and ballooning external debt has led to sustained weakness in her currency, the Indian rupee.

In short, the frantic Indian government has been passing the blame on gold on what truly has been a problem of political greed via fiscal intemperance.

Importantly, the Indian government’s attack on gold represents a duplicitous move. 

While the government wants access on the private sector’s savings via the banking system (which aside from funding governments will incur various taxes and fees), the desire to reduce the public’s gold holdings by holding paper money, the rupee, means governments would also impose “the inflation tax”. 

So bank depositors will be hit by low interest rate, inflation tax, various fees and will be forced to hold and finance government debt, in favor of the government (who may default).  

One can’t rely on statistical inflation figures to accurately represent real conditions. Statistics are likely to be manipulated for the purposes of financial repression or government plunder of private sector resources. Thus, much of the average Indians will unlikely fall for such 'inflation indexed bonds' subterfuge.

So like anywhere else, governments have been resorting to direct and indirect confiscations with increasing frequency and intensity. 

Signs of boom days eh?

More entwined reasons why India’s war on gold will fail.

Gold has both cultural and monetary essence to the average Indians.

As the Deccan Gold Mines enunciates: (bold mine)
Over centuries and millennia, gold has become an inseparable part of the Indian society and fused into the psyche of the Indian. Having passed through fire in its process of evolution it is seen as a symbol of purity, the seed of Agni, the God of fire. Perhaps this is why it is a must at every religious function in India. Gold has acted as the common medium of exchange or the store of value across different dynasties in India spanning thousands of years and countless wars. Thus wealth could be preserved inspite of wars and political turbulence. For centuries, gold has been a prime means of saving in rural India.
Next as related to the cultural-religious context, India’s history has been littered with economic crises and even currency problems

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To account for a recent history here is Wikipedia
Since 1950, India ran into trade deficits that increased in magnitude in the 1960s. The Government of India had a budget deficit problem and therefore could not borrow money from abroad or from the private sector, which itself had a negative savings rate. As a result, the government issued bonds to the RBI, which increased the money supply, leading to inflation. In 1966, foreign aid, which was hitherto a key factor in preventing devaluation of the rupee was finally cut off and India was told it had to liberalise its restrictions on trade before foreign aid would again materialise. The response was the politically unpopular step of devaluation accompanied by liberalisation. The Indo-Pakistani War of 1965 led the US and other countries friendly towards Pakistan to withdraw foreign aid to India, which further necessitated devaluation. Defence spending in 1965/1966 was 24.06% of total expenditure, the highest in the period from 1965 to 1989. This, accompanied by the drought of 1965/1966, led to a severe devaluation of the rupee. Current GDP per capita grew 33% in the Sixties reaching a peak growth of 142% in the Seventies, decelerating sharply back to 41% in the Eighties and 20% in the Nineties.
Aside from the rupee chart above, the following table shows how the rupee slumped relative to the US dollar from a conversion rate of 4.79 rupee/US in 1950 to 45.83 rupee/US in 2010.

One would also notice that from a base point of zero in 1975, inflation surged to 126 in 2010. And despite the plummeting rupee, through 1975 per capita income as % of the US has gyrated from 1.5% to 2.18%. This means that whatever growth India has posted over the years has failed to keep at the rate of the growth in the US. 

In short, devaluation has not solved what has been a problem of politicized economy.

This brings to fore the lessons from the great Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises
The economic backwardness of such countries as India consists precisely in the fact that their policies hinder both the accumulation of domestic capital and the investment of foreign capital. As the capital required is lacking, the Indian enterprises are prevented from employing sufficient quantities of modem equipment, are therefore producing much less per man-hour, and can only afford to pay wage rates which, compared with American wage rates, appear as shockingly low.

There is only one way that leads to an improvement of the standard of living for the wage-earning masses — the increase in the amount of capital invested. All other methods, however popular they may be, are not only futile, but are actually detrimental to the well-being of those they allegedly want to benefit.
What India requires is not to regulate or prohibit gold but to further liberalize or depoliticize the economy. 

Unfortunately politics is about smoke and mirrors rather than the upliftment of the general welfare

Another huge reason such campaign will fail is due to the informal economy. 

The informal economy means low banking penetration levels.

From DNB.com.in
With regard to financial access and penetration, India ranks low when compared with the OECD countries. India offered 6.33 branches per 100,000 persons whereas OECD countries provided for 23-45 branches per 100,000 people in 2009. For India, the number of branches and ATMs per 100,000 persons has increased to 7.13 and 5.07 in 2010.

In India, the penetration of banking services is very low. Merely, 57% of population has access to a bank account (savings) and 13% of population has debit cards and 2% has credit cards. This represents the unmet demand and the scope for expansion for the banks in India.
And prohibition of gold and offering inflation indexed bonds as alternative will hardly improve on banking penetration levels hobbled by overregulation.

And because of intensive politicization of the Indian economy, a significant segment of India’s growth has been in the informal economy

From Businessworld/Bloomberg: (bold mine)
The size of India’s “informal” economy, meanwhile, handicaps efforts to track the number of Indians who are gainfully employed. Four out of five urban workers—who collectively produce an estimated three-quarters of the country’s output—are informally employed. That means their work does not show up in official figures on productivity, innovation, social mobility and other standard metrics of progress. It’s possible to debunk some of the myths about India’s work force—three-quarters of self-employed workers in urban areas, for example, are in single-person businesses or family enterprises without hired labor, rather than upwardly mobile entrepreneurs—but a clear picture of exactly how many Indians are working, and where, remains elusive.
The informal economy, hence, represents political or government failure from which India's government has taken gold as the 'fall guy'.
Finally, gold fits to a tee the informal economy

From the Economist (bold mine) 
Pune’s wide boys aside, the traditional gold consumers are southern peasants buying jewellery. They have no access to formal finance; gold requires no paperwork, incurs no tax and is liquid. But over the past decade the mania has spread. By weight consumption has doubled, for several reasons: a surge in money earned on the black market; investors chasing the gold price; and the dismal returns savers get from deposit accounts. Real interest rates are low, reflecting high inflation and a repressed financial system that is geared to helping the state finance itself.
Another significant factor why the war on gold will fail is political insanity: doing things over and over again and expecting different results. 

Attacking gold as part of financial repression measures has previously failed, it shouldn't be different this time

From the same Economist article:
India has tried coercion. Between 1947 and 1966 it banned gold imports. After that it used a licensing system. Neither worked. Smuggling soared and policymakers were reduced to tinkering with airport-baggage allowances. By 1997 trade was liberalised.
All these political pretenses which are really intended as confiscations of private savings whether through gold, cash transactions, bank deposits or bitcoins (cryptocurrencies) will eventually be exposed for the fraud they are.

India's war on gold will only intensify the growth of smuggling and the informal economy.  

India's war on gold signifies also an expression of growing desperation by the Indian political class over their hold on power whose economy has partly been buoyed by credit bubbles.

India's war on gold could likewise be a part of the grand design of the cabal of political institutions or the banking system, central banks and welfare warfare states led by Wall Street in working to preserve the current unsustainable system by spreading disinformation and by the manipulation of the markets in order to dissuade the public on currency alternative options as gold or bitcoins.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

How Paper Wall Street Gold Dominates the Gold Markets

Now we have a better picture of the ongoing selloffs in gold.

We have been told that overall demand of gold slumped during the first quarter to a nine year low, primarily due to Paper Exchange Traded Products (ETP) gold.

From Bloomberg: (all bold mine)

Gold demand dropped 13 percent to the lowest in nine years in the first quarter as record exchange-traded product sales by investors outweighed a surge in buying from China and India, the World Gold Council said.
Yet most of the selling in Paper gold has been US based. Same article...
Prices that rallied as much as sevenfold in the past 12 years entered a bear market last month as inflation failed to accelerate and as equities climbed on mounting optimism that the U.S. will lead a global economic recovery. Some investors’ loss of faith in gold as a protection of wealth is being reflected in ETP holdings that have declined every month this year. About 75 percent of the ETP sales were from U.S. products, the council estimates. The price slump boosted demand for coins and jewelry….

Investors sold a record 182.1 tons of gold through ETPs in the three months through March, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Assets have since dropped another 230.1 tons, falling to 2,219.7 tons by May 14, the lowest since July 2011. Holdings are down 16 percent this year after increasing every year since the first product was listed in 2003.
The impression painted by the media is that buyers of jewelry and coins have not been due to monetary "purchasing power preservation" reasons. Only Wall Street people are qualified to be labeled as "investors".

On the other hand, falling prices have boosted demand for physical gold around the world
Global jewelry demand rose 12 percent to 551 tons in the latest quarter, as purchases jumped 19 percent to 184.8 tons in China and climbed 15 percent to 159.5 tons in India, the report showed. U.S. jewelry consumption was up 6.2 percent, the first quarterly increase since 2005, Grubb said…

Total consumer demand in China jumped 20 percent to 294.3 tons, beating Indian consumption that climbed 27 percent to 256.5 tons, the council said. Bar and coin investment advanced 22 percent to 109.5 tons in China and rose 52 percent to 97 tons in India. While the council previously said China will probably overtake India as the biggest buyer on an annual basis, it expects Indian demand may reach about 965 tons this year, remaining above Chinese consumption of about 880 tons.

“You may see a situation in the future where these two markets change places with each other on quite a regular basis,” said Grubb. “Before, it did look as if China was going to accelerate through India quite quickly and become the larger market for a sustainable period. I think that’s now much less clear. The good thing is you’ve got two big markets now.”

Global coin sales were up 19 percent from a year earlier and bar demand rose 8.1 percent. Over-the-counter and stock flow demand, partly a statistical residual, was at 119.6 tons, compared with sales of 75 tons a year earlier, the council said. That left total investment little changed at 320.4 tons.
So essentially this reveals of the escalating conflict between Paper Wall Street gold versus Physical real gold: Wall Street versus the world.

Current activities validates my perception where paper gold sales in the US are being transferred to the physical market across the globe. More from the same article:
There’s a dichotomy here between what’s happened in the ETFs, which is mainly U.S. based, and what’s happened in OTC investment, which is more outside the U.S.,” said Grubb. The OTC estimate “suggests that some investors in other geographies were buying gold and they were doing it through allocated and unallocated bullion accounts. My hunch is that a lot of that increase in demand will have been outside North America.”
It’s not just physical markets though, emerging market central banks have remained as vigorous net buyers too
Central banks added 109.2 tons to reserves in the three months through March, a ninth successive quarter of net buying, the council said. Nations from Brazil to Russia added 534.6 tons to reserves last year, 17 percent more than in 2011 and the most since 1964, it estimates. Buying may be between 450 and 550 tons this year, Grubb said.

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The chart, courtesy of the World Gold Council shows of the distribution of gold demand. It also has been a revelation of the current activities in the gold markets: Wall Street versus the world

Let us summarize: the major categories of gold demand specifically jewelry, bars and coins and central banks remain net buyers, whose rate of purchasing activities have been robustly growing even as prices fall.

Net sellers have mostly been ETFs which are 75% based on the US. Technology demand which is a fraction of the overall also posted a slight decline.

Bottom line: the current selling pressures in gold has MOSTLY been a Wall Street dictated affair.

So how large are the ETFs?

According to the World Gold Council’s latest report
As of end-March, total ETF gold holdings accounted for just 1% of the entire 175,000t above-ground stock of gold. The outflow of from ETFs in the first quarter, while sizeable and significant in its impact on the overall demand figures represents an equally small proportion of the overall stock gold held by private investors.
In the latest press release, the WGC confirmed the substance of the real markets over ETFs:
Marcus Grubb, Managing Director, Investment at the World Gold Council commented: 

“The price drop in April, fuelled by non-physical moves in the market, proved to be the catalyst for a surge of buying that has left many retailers short of stock and refineries introducing waiting lists for deliveries. Putting this into context, sales of bars and coins, jewellery and consumption in the technology sector still make up 81% of the market
And who are these ETP/ETF holders? 

Wall Street people like George Soros, Blackrock Inc. and etc.…

If ETF products are just a smidgen of the overall markets how can they negate the influence of the much larger physical real markets?

The answer: through leveraged derivatives gold markets

Former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury Paul Craig Roberts at the lewrockwell.com explains:
The price of bullion is not set in the physical market where individuals take delivery of bullion purchases. It is set in the paper futures market where short selling can drive down the price even if the demand for physical possession is rising. The paper gold market is also the market in which people speculate and leverage their positions, place stop-loss orders, and are subject to margin calls.

When the enormous naked shorts hit the COMEX, stop-loss orders were triggered adding to the sales, and margin calls forced more sales. Investors who were not in on the manipulation lost a lot of money.

The sales of GLD shares are accumulated by the banksters in 100,000 lots and presented to GLD for redemption in gold acquired at the driven down price.

The short sale is leveraged by the stop-loss triggers and margin calls, and results in a profit for the banksters who placed the short sell order. The banksters then profit again as they sell the released gold into the physical market, especially in Asia, where demand has been stimulated by the sharp drop in bullion price and by the loss of confidence in fiat currency. Asian prices are usually at a higher premium above the spot prices in New York-London.

Some readers have said “don’t bet against the Federal Reserve; the manipulation can go on forever.” But can it? As the ETFs such as GLD are drained of gold, their ability to cover any of their obligations to investors diminishes. In my opinion, these ETFs are like a fractional reserve banking system. The claims on gold exceed the amount of gold in the trusts. When the ETFs are looted of their gold by the banksters, the gold price will explode, as the claims on gold will greatly exceed the supply.

Kranzler reports that the current June futures contracts are 12.5 times the amount of deliverable gold. If more than 8 percent of these trades were to demand delivery, COMEX would default. That such a situation is possible indicates the total failure of federal financial regulation.
12.5 times leveraged!! No wonder Wall Street can dictate on such terms.

Unfortunately, Wall Street cannot print gold. Physical gold buyers will demand possession.
 
Thus the ongoing fire sale in gold which also means shifting ownership from Wall Street to the world, would eventually translate to less leverage for the former to manipulate on the gold markets

For now, Wall Street hope and prays that given their huge leverage, claims on Paper gold will not be transformed into demand deliveries.

War on Bitcoin: US Government Seizes Assets of Mt Gox

The US government has officially launched a campaign against bitcoin by seizing accounts tied to one of the largest bitcoin exchange.

WASHINGTON—U.S. officials dealt a blow to the fledgling digital currency called bitcoin, freezing an account that is tied to the largest bitcoin exchange just months after regulators warned that such entities should follow traditional rules on money laundering.

The authorities obtained a warrant Tuesday to seize an account of a subsidiary of Mt. Gox held at the online payments firm Dwolla, according to a copy of the warrant provided by the Department of Homeland Security on Wednesday. The department declined to comment further on the matter.

The scrutiny from law enforcement comes after the Treasury Department ruled in March that the same money-laundering rules that apply to traditional money-order providers, such as Western Union Co., WU +0.98% would also be applied to firms that issue or exchange online cash, including currencies not backed by a central bank.
Bitcoins are supposedly decentralized. So technically speaking the US government cannot directly strike at bitcoin without taking on the internet itself. Thus the US government’s campaign against bitcoin has been channeled through the financing facilities of the trading platforms and not bitcoin itself. 

But so far, other exchanges as US-based competitors Seattle-based CoinLab and San Francisco-based Coinbase or bitcoin exchanges registered with the Treasury Department has not been subjected to the same harassment. On the other hand, the Mt. Gox case should benefit them.

The US government wants bitcoin dealers to operate under their umbrella and has assailed or harassed those operating outside their ambit.

In short, the governments will work on controlling cryptocurrencies covering all variants; aside from Bitcoin: Litecoin, PPcoin, Freicoin, Solidcoin, BBQcoin, Fairbrix, Geistgeld among the many more.

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Besides, it may come as a coincidence but the Mt. Gox crackdown comes in the light of the second wave of selling pressure on gold prices. Gold fell 2.34% last night to close below the psychological $1,400 threshold level.

Remember that the Wall Street initiated flash crash in gold came alongside the crash in bitcoin prices during mid April. (chart from stockcharts.com and bitcoincharts.com)

The current actions against Mt.Gox’s bitcoin platform has so far unaffected prices of bitcoins.

The crux is--bitcoins and gold appear to be simultaneously under political pressure as expressed through prices or through direct government intervention

Yet look at the irony with the following headline: US Stocks Rise on Stimulus bets as Manufacturing Falls.

This means more bad news is good news; which also implies that stocks have been totally dependent on steroids, thus the parallel universe: stagnant economies yet surging stocks on steroids.

This also impresses on the public that the connection between gold and government steroids have become detached. People are being made to believe that gold have lost its “inflation hedge” function. (Although in the real world this hasn’t been true: Just take a look at the seminal hyperinflation phase in Argentina where the average citizens flee to gold and bitcoins as refuge)

What else am I saying? Well, governments simply hates competition. So currency alternatives as gold and bitcoins are not just being manipulated, they are being attacked.

All financial markets are being manipulated, but at different degrees. Assets that benefits the political objectives of governments such as stocks, bonds and the property sector are being subsidized (directly and indirectly) whereas those opposed such as short sellers, commodities and bitcoins are being marginalized. 

But the real economy, which allegedly has been the target of all these assistance, has been ignoring them.  

And yet the real objective behind all these has been to save or preserve the cartel of the political institutions of the banking system-central bank-welfare/warfare state. Remember rising asset prices buoy the balance sheets of insolvent banks and governments, thereby the cumulative inflationist policies.

Thus the parallel universe or the huge detachment between the real economy and prices of financial assets.

All these are really signs of bubble blowing activities everywhere and of how terribly desperate governments have become. 

Yet all failed government actions would translate to deeper confiscations of people's savings by governments. Hence, governments are working around the clock to close all possible loopholes as seen by the attack on Mt. Gox or from the Indian government's ban on gold imports.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

War on Gold: India bans Import Consignments

Well we don’t need a conspiracy plot to know that India’s gold trade has repeatedly been under assault from her government.

From the Reuters:
Gold buying in India, the world's biggest buyer of the metal, came to a halt on Tuesday, a day after the central bank restricted gold imports on consignment basis and jewellery sellers saw a sharp rise in festival sales.

On May 13, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) banned gold imports through consignment, and traders awaited for more clarity from the central bank. Gold and silver imports rose 138 percent in value terms to $7.5 billion, data from the trade ministry showed, increasing pressure on the current account balance.
This has likely been in reaction to the fantastic 138% jump in gold imports last month, which has been spurred by a demand spike following gold price's flash crash fomented by Wall Street.

From the Hindu Times:
Terming the 138 per cent surge in gold imports last month as an ‘aberration’, the government on Tuesday expressed the hope that the appetite for foreign gold would subside by next month due to the high inventory costs.

Overall, the recent surge in imports has attributed to the drop in global commodity prices, including gold.

Talking to reporters, Economic Affairs Secretary Arvind Mayaram said it appears that to hedge against future rise the traders in India have imported large quantity of gold.
If it is true that 138% surge in gold imports has been an ‘aberration’, then why the need for the import ban? Obviously the Indian government wants to make sure that the proclaimed ‘aberration’ becomes a reality through social controls.

What such controls will do instead is to drive gold trades underground and push up premiums as supply shrinks.

Media appears to have already been in cahoots with the government in the implicit campaign to downplay or shoot down India’s feverish gold trade. 

Taking a look at last Friday’s headlines from Reuters, it says "Gold Stuck in a Trading Range, physical demand down"

Has physical demand really been down?

More from the report: “Gold futures edged lower on Friday, but still stuck in familiar trading range, though demand from physical buyers was down compared with last week amid limited supplies ahead of a major gold buying festival.” (bold added)

Physical demand has been down because lack of supply? Gee. Lack of trade due to limited supply doesn’t necessarily mean physical demand is down. This may be so because limited supply means extremely high premiums. 

While this may be a journalistic gaffe, on the other hand, it could well be a misrepresentation.

All these reveals how financially desperate governments have been tightening the noose on the public’s savings by attempting to wring out currency alternatives such as gold and bitcoin.

Desperate times calls for desperate measures. 

Here’s a guess, India’s government will fail in her quest to quash the gold trade, which has not been only a cultural affinity but also a monetary-purchasing power issue.