Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silver. Show all posts

With 2013 now under way, the Godfather of newsletter writers, Richard Russell, told his subscribers that after being in the business for 60 years, he has never seen anything like this (described below).  Russell also discussed the massive silver short position and gold’s eternal value.  Here is what Russell had to say: “Bull market or bear market?  Below we see a listing of the year-end cost of gold denominated in Federal Reserve Notes (these notes are now commonly called “dollars”).  From a market standpoint, we're looking at one of the greatest bull markets in history.  But ironically, referring to “dollars alone,” this is one of the worst bear markets I've ever seen.
 
Richard Russell continues:

“Bear market?  Sure, back in the year 2000, for only 273 dollars you could buy one ounce of gold.  But by 2012, you needed over 1600 dollars to buy the same one ounce of gold.  The eternal value of gold doesn't change.  It's the purchasing power of the Federal reserve note that has changed.


The price of gold in terms of “dollars” has now risen thirteen years in succession.  But what is even more remarkable is the fact that most Americans have totally ignored (even despised) this remarkable bull market.  Let a stock rise seven or eight years in a row, and it will be the talk of Wall Street and the talk of every social gathering in the nation.


Yet this amazing bull market in gold stands alone, sneered at and almost hated.  I've been in this business for over 60 years, and I've never seen anything quite like it.  However, I do think I know something about human nature.  What I've learned about human nature is that it doesn't change.  For instance, if a stock creeps up year after year, sooner or later the crowd will discover it -- and then they'll pounce on it, ultimately sending that undiscovered stock far above its reasonable price.


My belief is that somewhere ahead, the crowd will latch on to gold.  Then, as disinterested in gold as they are now, the crowd will pile into gold with the same frenzy that overtook the storied “49ers” when they packed their bags, kissed their wives and kids good bye, and headed West in search of gold.


Gold is the only item that elicits both greed and fear.  The greed factor is so well known that I don't have to explain it here.  But the fear factor only arises when men (and women) see the “value” of their money disappearing.  Nothing concentrates the mind as dramatically as seeing the purchasing power of one's hard-earned income and savings being ruthlessly destroyed.


As I write, Ben Bernanke's Federal Reserve is systematically shaving off the purchasing power of the dollar in the same way that you can peel the layers off an onion.  The US has been in the process of constructing the greatest credit bubble in history.  The world has never seen anything like it.


This enormous bubble is now being attacked by the worldwide forces of deflation.  Fed Chairman Bernanke is terrified by the mere thought of deflation.  Bernanke will not stand for deflation.  He has said as much.  And he will attack deflation and crumbling asset prices with all the inflationary power at his command.


As the ocean of new dollars pours out of the computers of the Federal Reserve, the purchasing power of the dollar erodes.  It erodes slowly at first, but as the river of dollars turn into an ocean, slowly-rising inflation segues into a monster.  Finally, the crowd recognizes what is happening to their money.


The loaf of bread that cost a dollar last year suddenly costs four dollars.  The cup of coffee that cost a dollar last week goes on special today for two fifty.  The college tuition that cost four thousand dollars now costs sixteen thousand and there's the extra for a dorm. You're suddenly paralyzed.  A light bulb in your head starts to glow.  And just as suddenly, the mad, frantic rush for gold is on.


Old timers shake their heads knowingly and repeat the old saw, “There's no fever like gold fever!”  And the rush for the yellow metal turns into a full frenzy.  Even as I write, the subtle but tell-tale signs of “gold-fever” are seen and heard.  New gold funds and new gold ETFs are started.


Full-page advertisements appear in the newspapers, drawing attention to the loss of purchasing power in the dollar, and lauding the advantages of owning gold and silver.  Gold vending machines appear at airports and in European and Asian department stores.  Pressure is rising to force lawmakers to elect gold as legal tender.


On March 29, 2011, the state of Utah passed a law stating that gold and silver will be legal tender in the state of Utah.  Imagine, just imagine -- gold being treated as real money!  That alone shows us how far and how completely insane the nation's attitude towards gold and silver has become.  Gold has been treated as money for 3,000 years.  “As good as gold” is a well-known expression.  Yet, today in the US, gold is not considered to be legal tender.


No fiat money has lasted for as long as a century.  The US has had prior experience with fiat money -- the Civil War Greenbacks, the “Bills of Credit” of the original American colonies, the ill-fated Continentals during the Civil War.  None of these have survived, and neither will the Federal Reserve notes that we now refer to as “dollars.”


I dislike falling back on the morality argument, but consider this.  I may work a lifetime for five million dollars.  Yet some academic working for the Federal Reserve can press some keys on a computer and create ten billion dollars instantly without working up a sweat.  Is the ten billion dollars he creates moral money?  Did anyone work for the money?  Did anyone take a risk for the money?  Did anyone drop a bead of sweat for it?  No, then I claim it is immoral and actually evil money, and as such it is doomed.


The only power evil has is the power to destroy itself.  I affirm that the Federal Reserve note is doomed.  When the Federal Reserve note goes down the drain, all fiat money in the world will go down with it.  Today information travels around the world with the speed of NOW.  People around the planet will see that fiat money is a fantasy and a counterfeit fraud foisted upon them by unconscionable and unscrupulous bankers.  It is then that the crowd will turn to gold, in much the way that people turned to gold back in 1978 to 1980.


Now this may be “far out.”  I'm reading a lot about silver and its huge short position.  I hear that the silver shorts are bigger than the amount of physical silver that is readily available.  The silver mining stocks have already surged.  And I wonder if silver starts to boom, whether that action wouldn't rub off on gold?  Hmmm, it's a thought.”

source here

Posted by Mr Thx Tuesday, January 8, 2013 0 comments

FactSet
Silver. Rock climbers call this “extreme verticality.” Click for jumbo chart.

This has been an historically awful day for precious metals.

Here’s just how grim the selloff in silver was today:

The $6.49, 18% decline to $30.05 an ounce (that’s the September contract) was the worst dollar loss since January 22, 1980 and the worst percentage loss since April 27, 1987.

It was the second-biggest dollar loss in history and the fifth-largest percentage loss in history.

Silver has tumbled 26% this week.

Gold had its own very bad, no-good day, too, and its week was actually much worse than silver’s.

Gold lost nearly 10% this week, or $175 an ounce, to $1637.50 (again, that’s the September contract). That was the biggest weekly dollar decline since January 25, 1980, and its biggest weekly percentage loss since February 25, 1983. This was only silver’s worst week since May 2011 — silver’s been pretty volatile this year.

Today’s loss in gold, $101.70, or 6%, was its worst percentage loss since June 2006. It was the third-worst dollar loss for gold in history.

Somebody out there is clearly dumping silver to cover losses, but there are more fundamental reasons for the pounding, too, writes Tatyana Shumsky:

silver is also facing pressure from the darkening economic outlook because it is widely used in manufacturing and industrial applications. Alarms were raised this week when China, long considered the world’s economic engine, showed its manufacturing sector has contracted for the third consecutive month.

“With China’s economy slowing, with our economy going into a recession, with Europe going out the window, the industrial metals are being sold off viciously and silver is caught up in that,” said Frank McGhee, head precious metals dealer at Integrated Brokerage Services in Chicago.

Silver is used as a catalyst in making polyester, a common fiber used in clothes; the precious metal also coats CDs and DVDs and is used in glass for flat-panel TV screens. A sharp decline in economic activity would reduce demand for these products and undercut physical demand for the metal.

Meanwhile, gold has utterly failed as a safe haven this week, as investors have had to sell it to cover losses. The world has also rushed to the dollar for safety, and a stronger dollar is bad news for gold. And a weaker economy is bad for inflation, also bad for gold.

source

Posted by Mr Thx Sunday, September 25, 2011 0 comments

Buyers, who have legally contracted to take physical delivery of metals, are said to be accepting large, paper bribes to accept a cash settlement instead.

The reasons are obvious why there has been a great deal of discussion about actual, formal “defaults” in the precious metals markets. Among those “obvious reasons” is that informal defaults are apparently already taking place in both gold and silver markets.

Beginning in the London gold market over a year ago, and now rumored to be occurring in New York’s “Comex” silver futures market, buyers who have legally contracted to take “physical delivery” of the metals they have purchased are said to be accepting large, paper bribes to accept a “cash settlement” instead.

There are many reasons for investors to take such “rumors” seriously. Empirically, we see the premiums being charged for physical bullion (even from large, established dealers) rising to levels never before seen (around the world). This strongly suggests a very tight market for bullion. This is confirmed through the anecdotal reports of both industrial users and large institutional investors (such as Sprott Asset Management) that they are having a great deal of difficulty locating any large quantities of bullion available for sale.

In theoretical terms, we are merely seeing the culmination of arrogant bankers attempting to defy the elementary laws of supply and demand for over a quarter of a century. Even those with no training in economics know the basic rule (since it is merely an expression of common sense): when prices rise, demand falls; when prices fall, demand rises.

There are many derivative principles which flow from this one basic law. Among the most salient (and the one apparently beyond the comprehension of bankers) is that if you under-price any good it will be over-consumed. I have demonstrated the unequivocal truth of this principle previously, and so will not do so again. Suffice it to say that in deliberately under-pricing gold and silver for well over a quarter of a century (through their relentless manipulation of these markets), the bankers have caused more than 25 years of excessive demand – where previous surpluses in these markets have been transformed into huge supply-deficits.

In the gold market, where virtually all of the bullion ever produced has been conserved, this distortion of markets has merely resulted in a massive transfer of bullion: out of the vaults of the West and into the vaults of the East. The situation in the silver market is entirely different.

Being both much cheaper than gold, and possessing even more superior chemical and metallurgical properties, silver was written off by those with no understanding of precious metals as merely an “industrial” commodity. As a matter of common sense, the rapid increase in industrial demand for silver must make it more “precious” rather than less so.

Illustrating this elementary logic, the combination of gross under-pricing and surging industrial demand has served to decimate global silver stockpiles and inventories. Noted silver researcher Ted Butler has estimated that global stockpiles of silver plummeted from over 6 billion ounces (fifty years ago) to approximately 1 billion ounces today. Silver is literally six times “more precious” today than it was a half-century earlier. In terms of “inventories” (the amount of silver actually available for sale today), the destruction caused by the bankers is even more apparent.

Between 1990 and 2005, global silver inventories plummeted by roughly 90%: from over 2 billion ounces to little more than 200 million ounces. Since 2005, there has been a massive inventory-sham perpetrated by the bankers and the quasi-official “keeper of records” for the gold and silver sector: GFMS and the CPM Group.

Through the farcical practice of adding the paper-bullion of silver “bullion-ETF’s” to inventories and pretending this represents “new silver”, inventories have magically “risen” by roughly 400% since then – despite the seemingly incongruous facts that silver demand has increased dramatically, while supply has remained flat.

In fact, any bullion actually held in a bullion-ETF cannot be an “inventory”, since it fails to satisfy the basic definition: it is not for sale, but rather is privately held by the unit-holders of these funds. How can the holders of such funds sleep at night, knowing that the legal “custodian” of their bullion is telling the world that their silver is “for sale”?

Secondly, these holdings of bullion-ETF’s are not “new silver” in any possible sense of those words. The bullion-ETF’s didn’t mine their own silver. They didn’t discover “secret stockpiles”, all they have done is to buy 100’s of millions of ounces of silver out of existing inventories. For the record-keepers of the silver sector to pretend that these funds are “new silver inventories” is nothing but a shell-game of the clumsiest nature.

It is because of the enormous differences between gold and silver inventories that a “default event” is likely to be much different between gold and silver. With gold bullion being principally a financial asset in global markets, it is much easier to forestall a true “failure to deliver” from occurring at the official bullion exchanges (i.e. London or New York) through the unofficial default-mechanism of “cash settlements”.

Indeed, the bankers consider this mechanism to be a “perfect solution” for the parameters of having very finite amounts of (extremely leveraged) bullion, while having access to infinite amounts of banker-paper from central bank printing presses.

In reality, as the “cash settlements” continue to get larger and more frequent, at some point one or more large holders in this banker Ponzi-scheme are going to lose their nerve, and insist on real bullion rather than paper bribes. Such an event does not need to result in an official default. It merely needs to “spook the herd”.

As word gets out of some prominent investor refusing any quantity of banker-paper in favor of physical bullion (i.e. real “money”), this will cause the holders of $100’s of billions of dollars of “paper bullion” products to ask themselves a very pointed question: “am I holding ‘bullion’ or am I holding ‘paper’?”

More importantly will be their response to such a question. The two obvious responses are either to demand delivery or to sell their paper bullion. At that point, it won’t matter which path is taken, since both roads will lead to the obliteration of the bankers’ 100:1-leveraged, paper gold Ponzi-scheme.

If large numbers of bullion-holders demand delivery, there will either be a formal default in London or New York, or a formal default of the bullion-ETF’s – since their “custodians” (the world’s largest bullion “shorts”) will simply walk-away from their commitment to unit-holders in order to cover their own, massive short positions.

If large numbers of paper bullion-holders choose to sell their paper-bullion, this will create a massive decoupling between real “physical” bullion, and the vast quantities of paper-bullion products, where vendors are unable to conclusively prove these funds/accounts are fully-backed.

While the default scenario in the gold market is necessarily complicated, the silver market offers a much clearer picture. The billions of ounces of silver which have been “consumed” industrially are now buried (in tiny quantities) in land-fills all over the Western world. Meanwhile, a large and obvious supply-deficit remains (for any observer not duped by the clumsy inventory-fraud).

This can only end one way. Irrespective of whether the bankers can continue to mollify silver investors with their cash-bribes – and delay a formal default through investor demand alone, obviously this same mechanism cannot possibly work with the vast number of industrial users for silver – who need silver, or many/most of their businesses will cease to operate.

You can’t use banker-paper to make solar cells, lap-top computers, hybrid cars, anti-bacterial textiles, high-precision bearings, or satisfy any of the other myriad industrial applications for silver. Note that the bankers caused all of this incremental industrial demand through their decades of under-pricing silver – and now they have no possible means of meeting that demand.

The only question which cannot be answered for investors (the question which they would like answered the most) is “when will default occur?”

My own answer to this question is simple: the one aspect of “control” which the bankers still exert over the gold and silver markets is the timing of their own funerals. Allow these manipulated, grossly over-leveraged markets to implode today, and prices will soar higher (to multiples of current prices). Attempt to prolong their inevitable demise for several more months (years?), and all that happens is the implosion of these markets is even more catastrophic, with an even greater exponential effect on prices.

Investors should not be troubled by this relatively minor level of uncertainty, as their strategy should be obvious: continue to accumulate precious metals until the bankers self-destruct. The longer we are forced to wait for our final pay-off/validation, the greater the reward for our patience.

Meanwhile, the big-buyers who now rule this market can be expected to march precious metals prices higher – subject to occasional banker-orchestrated pull-backs, since these big-buyers will joyfully accept any “sales” on bullion provided to them by the bankers. The “obituaries” can already be written with respect to the era of banker-manipulation of precious metals markets.

source HERE

Posted by Mr Thx Thursday, January 20, 2011 1 comments

Leading economists and financial experts say that our economy cannot recover until the too big to fails are broken up. See this and this. The giant banks have been sucking money out of the real economy and making us all poorer. But the government is refusing to even rein in the mega-banks, let alone break them up.

One of the too big to fails - JP Morgan - manipulates the silver market. See this, this, this, this and this.

According to the National Inflation Association, JP Morgan is “short 30,000 silver contracts representing 150 million ounces of silver. This is one of the largest concentrated short positions in the history of all commodities, representing 31% of all open COMEX silver contracts.” This could leave JP Morgan exposed if people go out and buy physical silver in large numbers.

Mike Krieger and Max Keiser have an idea for attacking the weak underbelly of the seemingly invincible too big to fail banks and market manipulators ... all at the same time.

Specifically, they say that if everyone buys just 1 ounce of silver, it will force JP Morgan - a giant manipulator of the silver market - to cover its short positions, and drive it out of business.

Silver is way down today, so it is a perfect time to buy.

source HERE

Posted by Mr Thx Tuesday, November 16, 2010 0 comments
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