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Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

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  • Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

    On Tuesday morning, gold derivatives dealers, who had sold short in the face of a fast rising gold price, faced a serious predicament. Some 27,000 + contracts, representing about 15% of the April COMEX gold futures contracts remained open. Technically, short sellers are required to give “notice” of delivery to long buyers. However, in reality, buyers are the ones who control the amount of gold to be delivered. They “demand” delivery of physical gold by holding futures contracts past the expiration date. This time, long buyers were demanding in droves.

    In normal times, very few people do this. Only about 1% or less of gold contracts must be delivered. The lack of delivery demand allows the casino-like world of paper gold futures contracts to operate. Very few short sellers actually expect or intend to deliver real gold. They are, mostly, merely playing with paper. It was amazing, therefore, when March 30, 2009 came and passed, and so many people stood for delivery, refusing to part with their long gold futures positions.

    On Tuesday, March 31st, Deutsche Bank (DB) amazed everyone even more, by delivering a massive 850,000 ounces, or 850 contracts worth of the yellow metal. By the close of business, even after this massive delivery, about 15,050 April contracts, or 1.5 million ounces, still remained to be delivered. Most of these, of course, are unlikely to be the obligations of Deutsche Bank. But, the fact that this particular bank turned out to be one of the biggest short sellers of gold, is a surprise. Most people presumed that the big COMEX gold short sellers are HSBC (HBC) and/or JP Morgan Chase (JPM). That may be true. However, it is abundantly clear that they are not the only game in town.

    Closely connected institutions, it seems, do not have to worry about acting irresponsibly, in taking on more obligations than they can fulfill. Mysteriously, on the very same day that gold was due to be delivered to COMEX long buyers, at almost the very same moment that Deutsche Bank was giving notice of its deliveries, the ECB happened to have “sold” 35.5 tons, or a total of 1,141,351 ounces of gold, on March 31, 2009. Convenient, isn’t it? Deutsche Bank had to deliver 850,000 ounces of physical gold on that day, and miraculously, the gold appeared out of nowhere.

    The announcement of the ECB sale was made, as usual, dryly, without further comment. There was little more than a notation of a sale, as if it were a meaningless blip in the daily activity of the central bank. But, it was anything but meaningless. It may have saved a major clearing member of the COMEX futures exchange from defaulting on a huge derivatives position. We don’t know who the buyer(s) was, but we don’t leave our common sense at home. The ECB simply states that 35.5 tons were sold, and doesn’t name any names. Common sense, logic and reason tells us that the buyer was Deutsche Bank, and that the European Central Bank probably saved the bank and COMEX from a huge problem. What about the balance, above 850,000 ounces? What will happen to that? I am willing to bet that Deutsche Bank will use it, in June, to close out remaining short positions, or that it will be sold into the market, at an opportune time, if it hasn’t already been sold on Tuesday, to try to control the inevitable rise of the price of gold.

    Rest here.

    http://seekingalpha.com/article/1291...m-gold-default
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

  • #2
    Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

    Very interesting. 35T is more than 1.5% of the global yearly gold production... it is around 1 billion USD... helping the shorts to get out is clearly a gold price suppression action, and sends out a very clear message to the market. :mad:

    But I was not able to find information about where does the ECB take the gold from? has it a separate vault (from the various central banks)? :confused:

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    • #3
      Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

      You & i could never force the CB's to do the right thing, but we have friends coming:-

      China
      India
      Russia

      Mike

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      • #4
        Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

        Deutsch Bank is part of the London gold fix, is it that unusual ?

        http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_Fixing

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        • #5
          Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

          Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
          Fascinating.

          ...was reading this one not long ago:

          http://seekingalpha.com/article/1281...t-happens-next

          Theme? :rolleyes:

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          • #6
            Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

            can it be confirmed as to whether it was the bank that actually had the position or one of it's clients that uses Deutsche Bank to clear? i'm not sure how it would be reported at the exchange level but i think the activity that 'belongs' to the Banks is actually the net of their clearing business which is ultimately the net activity of their clients (mutual funds, hedge funds, etc)

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            • #7
              Re: Did the ECB save COMEX from default?

              It is equally plausible that this is the method that the ECB chose to sell its portion. (Though Sinclair disagrees apparently, saying it will never see the open market).
              Last edited by *T*; April 03, 2009, 09:02 AM. Reason: dammit you guys got me putting apostrophes in the wrong places
              It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.

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