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Gold and Silver: Shock Testing the Market

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  • Gold and Silver: Shock Testing the Market

    http://news.silverseek.com/TedButler/1219417468.php

    The Smoking Gun

    By: Theodore Butler

    -- Posted 22 August, 2008


    For years, the data contained in the weekly Commitment of Traders Report (COT), issued by the CFTC, have indicated that several large COMEX traders have manipulated the price of silver and gold. For an equal number of years, the CFTC has reluctantly responded to public pressure over this issue with blanket denials of any wrongdoing. Many analysts have agreed with the CFTC’s position, conjuring up various ways to explain why a massive short position held by a handful of traders is not manipulative.

    The recent widespread shortage of silver for retail purchase coupled with a price collapse appears to have shaken these analysts’ confidence that the COMEX silver market is operating ‘fair and square.’ Well it should, since there is no rational explanation for a significant price decline going hand in hand with product shortages other than collusive manipulation.

    For any remaining doubters that COMEX silver and gold pricing is manipulated, the following CFTC data should be considered. This data is taken from a monthly report issued by the CFTC, called the Bank Participation Report. Here’s the link for the report -

    http://www.cftc.gov/marketreports/ba...tion/index.htm The relevant data is found in the July and August futures sections. I will condense it.

    -Pic is attached to post-




    These facts speak for themselves. Here are the facts. As of July 1, 2008, two U.S. banks were short 6,199 contracts of COMEX silver (30,995,000 ounces). As of August 5, 2008, two U.S. banks were short 33,805 contracts of COMEX silver (169,025,000 ounces), an increase of more than five-fold. This is the largest such position by U.S. banks I can find in the data, ever. Between July 14 and August 15th, the price of COMEX silver declined from a peak high of $19.55 (basis September) to a low of $12.22 for a decline of 38%.

    For gold, 3 U.S. banks held a short position of 7,787 contracts (778,700 ounces) in July, and 3 U.S. banks held a short position of 86,398 contracts (8,639,800 ounces) in August, an eleven-fold increase and coinciding with a gold price decline of more than $150 per ounce. As was the case with silver, this is the largest short position ever by US banks in the data listed on the CFTC’s site. This was put on as one massive position just before the market collapsed in price.

    This data suggests other questions should be answered by banking regulators, the CFTC, or by those analysts who still doubt this market is rigged. Is there a connection between 2 U.S. banks selling an additional 27,606 silver futures contracts (138 million ounces) in a month, followed shortly thereafter by a severe decline in the price of silver? That’s equal to 20% of annual world mine production or the entire COMEX warehouse stockpile, the second largest inventory in the world. How could the concentrated sale of such quantities in such a short time not influence the price?

    Is there a connection between 3 U.S. banks selling an additional 78,611 gold futures contracts (7,861,100 ounces) in a month, followed shortly by a severe price decline in gold? That’s equal to 10% of annual world production and amounts to more than $7 billion worth of gold futures being sold by 3 U.S. banks in a month. How can this extraordinary concentrated trading size not be manipulative?

    Because prices fell so sharply after the short sales were taken (with the appropriate dirty tricks as I have previously explained) holders of known physical silver in the world suffered a decline in value of more than $2.5 billion and long COMEX silver futures holders suffered a similar $2.5 billion decline in the value of their contracts. In gold, because the dollar value held is much greater than silver, investor losses were much greater, on the order of hundreds of billions of dollars on their physical holdings. Declines in the value of mining shares adds many billions more. Was this loss of value caused by the concentrated short selling of 2 or 3 U.S. banks?

    What real legitimate business do 2 or 3 U.S. banks suddenly have for selling short such quantities of speculative instruments over a brief time period? Do we want banks to be engaging in this type of activity? If the manipulation was not successful, would U.S. taxpayers be called on to bail out yet another bank speculation gone bad?

    Do the traders who lost money in the recent price collapse of silver have a reason to believe that their money is now in the pockets of these two or three U.S. banks? If so, do they have recourse?

    The data in the Bank Participation report is clear and compelling. that it is hard to conclude anything but manipulation. It is beyond credulity to conclude other than two or three banks caused one of the most severe price collapses in precious metals history. The CFTC has a lot to answer for as the regulatory agency responsible for preventing this type of blatant manipulation.
    Attached Files

  • #2
    Re: Gold and Silver: Shock Testing the Market

    Sapiens......thanks for this analysis. I agree it is without question that silver and gold were manipulated for the profit of these banks. The question I have is which banks were involved? I'll bet a case can be made that the FED was involved too to help these banks recapitalize to fix their ailing balance sheets. Remember, most, if not all, the banks are hurting for capital. You are going to see desparate banks do desparate things (illegal) to fix it. The SEC and the CFTC don't care ...helll...they probably helped.
    RanMan :cool:

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    • #3
      Re: Gold and Silver: Shock Testing the Market

      no one in authority is allowed by law to release the names of futures market participants.

      if these banks are not clearing members (I just read Szabo's commentary on Butler's analysis and he writes, (paraphrased) that this bank report EXCLUDES the likes of Goldman Sachs & others with political pull in NY) or have the requisite political pull then I'm hoping CFTC will move against them in the hope that moving against these will lend CFTC credibility to later say "we discipline when needed - our past action shows that. The existing shorts are not illegal. If they were we would do the same to them that we did to the new shorts".

      punishing these guys would in some circles give the CFTC credibility.

      I hope they go that route, and make some slip up about "concentration" in official communication because that would really open them up to questioning - bring the debate to the heart of the matter, lopsided and extreme concentration.

      Also, if they decide to discipline these banks, one bank may decide to fight. If our action is illegal, why are much larger, much more concentrated actions legal?

      As I wrote in my little blurb in rants & raves, using the US courts, one combative litigant (who unfortunately needs to be well financed) could expose everything that's been happening (ie, all the shenanigans CFTC has suborned[*]) on COMEX


      Originally posted by GeraldRiggs View Post
      Sapiens......thanks for this analysis.
      The analysis is Ted butler's

      [*] meaning #2 below, "to procure by indirect means, ...; to instigate" - in my words, to invite mischief by lack of negative consequences, by inaction.


      Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary - Cite This Source - Share This

      Suborn
      Sub*orn"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Suborned; p. pr. & vb. n. Suborning.] [F. suborner, L. subornare; sub under, secretly + ornare to furnish, provide, equip, adorn. See Ornament.]

      1. (Law) To procure or cause to take a false oath amounting to perjury, such oath being actually taken. --Sir W. O. Russell.

      2. To procure privately, or by collusion; to procure by indirect means; to incite secretly; to instigate.

      Thou art suborned against his honor. --Shak.


      and from wordnet :
      1. incite to commit a crime or an evil deed; "He suborned his butler to cover up the murder of his wife"
      Last edited by Spartacus; August 24, 2008, 02:01 PM.

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      • #4
        Re: Gold and Silver: Shock Testing the Market

        Its interesting to note that in the case of gold shorts the number of shorts is only 14% higher than Nov 07's value, while silver shorts increased by more than 400%.

        cmxsilver.bmp

        cmxgold.bmp





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