Hedge funds, bank credit and other leveraging mechanisms has been increasingly used to fund trading of commodities.
Many of these commodity markets are very thin. The big pools of credit-financed capital are the 800 pound gorillas in these markets that can obliterate the traditional supply and demand dynamics between producers and consumers in these markets.
I believe that commodities such as gold or silver are primarily traded on the futures market. Very few people take delivery (under 2% I am told). So:
1. large pools of capital paper trade these commodities
2. these large pools have no interest in the commodities other than
speculation
3. most trades do not involve physical delivery, or if they do, it's in the
form of transferring title rather than physically moving goods from
one party to another for purposes of consumption
Normally commodity futures markets are in contango, so the further out delivery is set, the higher to price. This premium pays for carrying costs and risk of loss.
However, normal contango premiums can grow or shrink and even fall below zero.
It is my contention that this happens with paper trading and that this can completely screw up the underlying physical market. So while in theory the gold price may be $650 as set by the futures market, perhaps the physical price of gold is $700. Arbitrage is what keeps these aligned, but what if physical is in such demand that there is inability to deliver?
I'm wondering what your thoughts are on the possibility
of certain commodities (like gold or silver) skyrocketing in price if and when it becomes evident that the paper traded price is insufficient to actually meet real physical demand and if failure to deliver could result in a breakdown in these markets.
Many of these commodity markets are very thin. The big pools of credit-financed capital are the 800 pound gorillas in these markets that can obliterate the traditional supply and demand dynamics between producers and consumers in these markets.
I believe that commodities such as gold or silver are primarily traded on the futures market. Very few people take delivery (under 2% I am told). So:
1. large pools of capital paper trade these commodities
2. these large pools have no interest in the commodities other than
speculation
3. most trades do not involve physical delivery, or if they do, it's in the
form of transferring title rather than physically moving goods from
one party to another for purposes of consumption
Normally commodity futures markets are in contango, so the further out delivery is set, the higher to price. This premium pays for carrying costs and risk of loss.
However, normal contango premiums can grow or shrink and even fall below zero.
It is my contention that this happens with paper trading and that this can completely screw up the underlying physical market. So while in theory the gold price may be $650 as set by the futures market, perhaps the physical price of gold is $700. Arbitrage is what keeps these aligned, but what if physical is in such demand that there is inability to deliver?
I'm wondering what your thoughts are on the possibility
of certain commodities (like gold or silver) skyrocketing in price if and when it becomes evident that the paper traded price is insufficient to actually meet real physical demand and if failure to deliver could result in a breakdown in these markets.
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