Is the Fed’s ability to manipulate the price of gold running out? http://impactglassman.blogspot.mx/2014/01/former-assistant-secretary-of-treasury.html
Why is the Fed tapering? http://impactglassman.blogspot.mx/2014/01/why-is-fed-tapering-what-will-unravel.html
Market Manipulations Become More Extreme, More Desperate
February 7, 2014 | Original Here Go here to sign up to receive email notice of this news letter
Paul Craig Roberts and Dave Kranzler
In two recent articles we explained the hows and whys of gold price
manipulation. The manipulations are becoming more and more blatant. On
February 6 the prices of gold and stock market futures were
simultaneously manipulated.
On several recent occasions gold has attempted to push through the
$1,270 per ounce price. If the gold price rises beyond this level, it
would trigger a flood of short-covering by the hedge funds who are
“piggy-backing” on the bullion banks’ manipulation of gold. The
purchases by the hedge funds in order to cover their short positions
would drive the gold price higher.
With pressure being exerted by tight supplies of physical gold bars
available for delivery to China, the Fed is growing more desperate to
keep a lid on the price of gold. The recent large decline in the stock
market threatened the Fed’s policy of taking pressure off the dollar by
cutting back bond purchases and reducing the amount of debt
monetization.
Thursday, February 6, provided a clear picture of how the Fed
protects its policy by manipulating the gold and stock markets. Gold
started to move higher the night before as the Asian markets opened for
trading. Gold rose steadily from $1254 up to a high of $1267 per ounce
right after the Comex opened (8:20 a.m. NY time). The spike up at the
open of the Comex reflected a rush of short-covering, and the stock
market futures looked like they were about to turn negative on the day.
However, starting at 8:50 a.m., here’s what happened with Comex futures
and S&P 500 stock futures:
At 8:50 a.m. NY time (the graph time-scale is Denver time), 3,225
contracts hit the Comex floor. During the course of the previous 14
hours and 50 minutes of trading, about 76,000 total April contracts had
traded (Globex computer system + Comex floor), less than an average of
85 contracts per minute. The 3,225 futures contracts sold in one minute
caused a $15 dollar decline in the price of gold. At the same time, the
stock market futures mysteriously spiked higher:
As you can see from the graphs, gold was forced lower while the stock
market futures were forced higher. There was no apparent news or market
events that would have triggered this type of reaction in either the
gold or stock market. If anything, the trade deficit report, which
showed a higher than expected trade deficit for December, should have
been mildly bullish for gold and bearish for the stock market.
Furthermore, at the same time that gold was being forced lower on the
Comex, the U.S. dollar index experienced a sharp drop in price and
traded below the 81 level of support. The fall in the dollar is normally
bullish for gold.
The economy is getting weaker. Fed policy is obviously failing
despite recent official pronouncements that the economy is improving and
that Bernanke’s monetary policies succeeded. A just published study by
Jing Cynthia Wu and Fan Dora Zia concludes that the the positive impact
of the Federal Reserve’s policy of quantitative easing is so slight as
to be insignificant. The multi-trillion dollar expansion in the Federal
Reserve’s balance sheet lowered the unemployment rate by little more
than two-tenths of one percent, raised the industrial production index
by 2 percent, and brought about a mere 34,000 housing starts. http://econweb.ucsd.edu/~faxia/pdfs/JMP.pdf
The renewal of the battle over the debt ceiling limit is bullish for
gold and bearish for stocks. However, with the ongoing manipulation of
the gold price and stock averages via gold and stock market futures, the
normal workings of markets that establish true values are disrupted.
A rising problem for the manipulators is that the West is running low
on gold available for delivery to China and other Asian buyers. In
January China took delivery of a record amount of gold. China has been
closed since last Friday in observance of the Chinese New Year. As China
resumes purchases, default on delivery moves closer.
One way for the Fed and bullion banks to hold off defaulting on
Chinese purchases is to coerce holders of gold futures contracts to
settle in cash, not in delivery of gold, by driving down the price
during heavy Comex delivery periods. This is what likely occurred on
Feb. 6 in addition to the Fed’s routine price maintenance of gold.
As of Thurday’s (Feb. 6) Comex report for Wednesday’s (Feb. 5) close,
there were about 616,000 ounces of gold available to be delivered from
Comex vaults for February contracts totaling slightly more than 400,000
ounces, of which delivery notices for 100,000 ounces were given last
Wednesday night. If the holders of the other 300,000 contracts opt to
take delivery instead of cash settlement, February contracts would
absorb two-thirds of Comex gold available for delivery.
The Comex gold inventory has been a big source of gold shipments from
the West to the East, resulting in a decline of the Comex gold
inventory by over 4 million ounces–113 tonnes–during the course of 2013.
We know from reports from Swiss bar refiners that the 100 ounce Comex
gold bars are being received by these refiners and recast into the kilo
bars that the Chinese prefer and shipped to Hong Kong. With the amount
of physical gold in Comex vaults rapidly being removed, the Fed/bullion
banks use market ambush tactics such as those we describe above to
augment and conserve the supply of gold available for delivery.
Readers have asked if gold can continue to be shorted on the Comex
once no gold is left for delivery. From what we have seen–the fixing of
the LIBOR rate, the London gold price, foreign exchange rates, the price
of bonds and the manipulation of gold and stock market futures
prices–we don’t know what the limit is to the ability of the Fed, the
Treasury, the Plunge Protection Team, the Exchange Stabilization Fund,
and the banks to manipulate the markets.
Paul Craig Roberts is a former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury
for Economic Policy. Dave Kranzler traded high yield bonds for Bankers
Trust for a decade. As a co-founder and principal of Golden Returns
Capital LLC, he manages the Precious Metals Opportunity Fund.
One 77-year-old’s search for the truth: 9/11, election fraud, illegal wars, Wall Street criminality, a stolen nuke, the neocon wars, control of the U.S. government by global corporations, the unjustified assault on Social Security, media complicity, and the "Great Recession" about to become the second Great Depression. "The most important truths are hidden from us by the powerful few who strive to steal the American dream by keeping We the People in the dark."
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