Manipulating and hammering down the price of gold and silver
futures contracts has become the SOP at the COMEX and LBMA. I really wish JP Morgan would explain a
couple of things for us. Firstly, how
does it make any sense covering losses on naked short PM contracts by selling
more naked short PM contracts? Secondly, if PMs are such a bad investment why
is their inventory (and that of the GLD) disappearing into the hands of customers
demanding delivery of physical metals?
I don’t think I’m going to hold my breath waiting for answers that will
never come. Well at least not until
there is default coupled with massive class action suits.
This of course brings us back to my favorite realm, that of
unintended consequences, brought on by that most magnificent of combinations;
arrogance and stupidity. It would seem
the investing public is not quite as stupid or gullible as Jamie Dimon and
company would hope.
Case in point #1.
Total demand for US Silver Eagles and for Canadian Silver Maple Leaves
is far out stripping domestic production by millions of tons. Laws in both countries require that coins
must be produced from domestic supplies.
This forces both the mints and all the manufacturers that require silver
for their products onto the import markets to meet demand. The public knows a bargain basement price
when they see it, even when premiums over spot are at 30%!
And that is just the silver market. Demand for the popular 1/10 toz. Gold Eagles
has been so high that the West Point Mint has had to halt production several
times because the refineries can’t provide enough metal to the blank
manufactures to meet supply requests from the Mint.
Case in point #2.
India has long been one of the largest consumers of gold in the world,
both for investment and dowry jewelry.
Demand in India has become so large that the imports have grossly
distorted the country’s balance of trade. This had caused India to levy a 6%
tax on gold imports. The tax has had no
effect on demand and it was recently raised to 8%. Again the tax had no effect on demand, so now the Central Bank of
India has directed that commercial banks stop selling bullion coins. Year right, that’ll work! Nothing stifles demand for something like
telling people they can’t have it.
Case in point #3.
Over the last year or so France’s economy has been sliding down the
same hole of unpayable debt and expanding deficits that has driven Greece, Italy and Spain into insolvency. Newly elected President Hollande’s noted
response was to attempt to raise the top marginal tax rate to 75%. Not surprisingly then, anyone and everyone
in France with any measurable amount of wealth is busily engaged in finding
ways of getting said wealth out of the grasp of the Hollande government’s tax
collectors. In spite of various capital controls measures asset liquidation and outflows continue unabated. The latest reaction of the French government; prohibit sending
currency, bullion and jewelry through the mails! Yeah that’ll work. Future
headline; “Massive jewelry smuggling operation found at Swiss border!”
Oh wait gold is a just a “barbarous relic,” never mind.
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