Wednesday, September 10, 2008

BlowBack

At exactly the same time as silver prices are crashing the physical silver supply is drying like concrete. In the tug-of-war between prices manipulated downward, forcing demand for physical silver up the rope is stretched taunt and fraying in danger of exploding. This from Ted Butler's archives.

The urgent rush by the manipulators to liquidate every margined long by rigging lower prices, must be done before those lower prices activate the new physical demand and curtail physical supply. There is a blow back phenomenon at work here - at some point the artificial low prices will trigger a price explosion.

Financial and market developments seem to be rushing by at unworldly speed. Government bailouts, unprecedented market turmoil, non-stop conflicting commentary. It’s hard to comprehend everything, much less write about it. At the same time, the turmoil creates opportunities like never before. I’m an old hand with silver, yet it is beyond extraordinary to see plummeting prices amid a shortage. I know full well the reason for this apparent impossibility, but witnessing it is still incredible.

At exactly the same time silver is falling sharply in price, the physical demand has never been stronger. On the retail investment side, delays in delivery are longer and premiums are higher than ever before. This is a set of circumstances no one has ever witnessed. In fact, the opposite was supposed to happen when silver recently climbed into double digits. Silver would supposedly come out of the woodwork. No one predicted silver would be so hard to find. In spite of ramping up production, the US Mint can’t keep up with demand for Silver Eagles, for the first time in history.

The holdings in public and institutional silver vehicles are at all time records with no inventory liquidations recorded on the price decline. From the top of the market in July, silver is down near 40%, yet the big ETF, SLV, has increased its holdings by 5%, or 10 million ounces, to 210 million ounces. Over that same time, the big gold ETF has witnessed a near 10% liquidation in ounces, down 2 million ounces, or more than $1.5 billion. Yet gold has been stronger in price than silver. The law of supply and demand has apparently been turned on its head with silver.

The solitary reason for the price decline in silver (and gold), is the forced liquidation of leveraged paper long positions, primarily on the COMEX. This is the driving force behind the epic sell-off. More than 160 million ounces (and counting) of paper silver have been liquidated by those holding it on margin. That’s not physical ounces, only paper ounces. This has been the most blatant and effective liquidation in history. All under the nose of sleeping or complicit regulators.

In addition, the liquidation of paper silver has recently been centered on those holding long silver/short gold spreads on margin. This has caused the ratio of silver to widen to levels not seen in years. This has created an opportunity for those holding physical gold to switch to silver at extremely advantageous prices. No margin please, strictly cash metal for cash metal.

The true dichotomy is that silver has never been a better investment at precisely the same time it’s price performance has never been more extreme. I couldn’t make this up if I wanted to. The current silver Commitment of Trader (COT) data is the best it has been in a year (gold, as well). Regular readers know this is not unusual, as the pain of sell-offs create the buy points that we look back upon as ideal. But this current sell-off is like few before it, both for pain and potential reward. Furthermore, this last sell-off has set a new standard for the lack of regulatory oversight.

The Bank Participation Report for September has been released by the CFTC, and it is shocking. It provides further clear evidence of price manipulation by one or two U.S. banks in silver and by no more than three U.S. banks in gold. It should be obvious to even the semi-alert that these U.S. banks succeeded in engineering the price of silver and gold sharply lower. The only difference is that the big U.S. banks were successful in closing out much of their net short gold position, but were decidedly less successful in closing out their silver short position, in spite of massive overall liquidation. Here is the link for the data - http://www.cftc.gov/marketreports/bankparticipation/index.htmort

Distilling the numbers in this report and also utilizing the relevant weekly COT data, on a net basis (the only type that matters), from August 5 to September 2, on a $90 decline in gold, the 3 or less U.S. banks bought back almost 53,000 COMEX futures contracts. Non-U.S. banks bought an additional 20,000 gold futures contracts net. This total of 73,000 net contracts bought over the month accounts for 80% of the 91,000 contracts sold by leveraged longs on the big decline. This is what is known in manipulation circles as the ringing of the cash register.

In silver, the story was quite different. On a $3+ price decline, the one or two U.S. banks were only able to buy back, or ring the cash register, on 2,000 contracts net, leaving them still net short close to 32,000 contracts (160 million ounces.), as of Sep 2. The big short U.S. bank (or banks) only covered 12% of the total 16,500 contracts bought by other commercials and sold by margined paper longs over the month. (Non-U.S. banks haven’t changed their position of 3000 contracts net long in three months). In gold, the big banks accounted for 80% of the total commercial buying, in silver only 12%.

Every category of commercial traders bought more silver contracts than did the biggest short - the U.S. bank (or banks) for the reporting month. The raptors (the commercials other than the big 8) bought almost 9000 contracts of the total 16,500 bought in the month, adding to their big long position. The largest 5 through 8 traders bought back 2300 contracts of their short position. And even the remaining two or three members of the 4 largest traders bought back more than the big U.S. bank(s).

My point is that every commercial category of trader bought more silver contracts, on the big price decline, than did the very largest short holder of silver. Why would that be? Especially when the big banks bought back so much in gold. We’re not talking about speculators against commercials, we’re talking about all the commercials buying much more aggressively than the one U.S. bank (maybe two). I think the big silver short could be trapped.

The result of this inability or refusal of the very biggest silver short(s) to buy back in the historic price decline has been to set a new record of concentration by a U.S, bank(s). Please take the time to review all the markets in the Bank Participation Report for September, or any other month. You should not find a major market with a larger concentration by U.S. banks than the 28% held by the one or two in silver, long or short. And the 28% concentration listed in the report is not adjusted to remove spreads, which gooses the percentage of real concentration even higher, to more than 36%.

Let me state that clearly - one (maybe two) U.S. bank holds a net 36% share of the entire COMEX silver market. The same one or two U.S. banks hold 82% of the total commercial net short position. This is a concentration that is unprecedented; maybe double or triple or more what the Hunt Brothers held on the long side in 1980. Without these, one or two traders, there would hardly be any commercial silver short position at all. This makes the big concentrated short a danger to everyone, including the market itself. That’s why the regulators must act now.

Blow Back

We have actual retail silver shortages and prospective industrial shortages for one reason - the price is too low. The very last thing that will remedy a shortage is lower prices. Sharply lower silver prices will only induce further shortage. It is, quite literally, like throwing gasoline on a fire. It is only a matter of time before the new lower prices stimulate more demand, both for investment and user inventory further restricting supply. This is the essence of the law of supply and demand.

The urgent rush by the manipulators to liquidate every margined long by rigging lower prices, must be done before those lower prices activate the new physical demand and curtail physical supply. There is a blow back phenomenon at work here - at some point the artificial low prices will trigger a price explosion.

That the CFTC just reports this data and allows this crime to continue is shameful. Concentration is their main warning sign to thwart manipulation and they are doing nothing about it, in spite of that concentration growing and many of you pointing this out to them. I think the refusal by the CFTC and exchange regulators to act in the clear presence of manipulation has crossed the point of them just being incompetent. I now think they should be considered complicit in this silver manipulation. I can’t see how they are not going to end up in jail for refusing to uphold the law they took an oath to uphold.

I know it’s frustrating to continue to complain to authorities who turn a blind eye to illegality, but it must be done. There is no other practical way. If you haven’t contacted them, you must do so now. If you have contacted them, you must contact them again. And keep contacting them as long as this crime remains in progress. I can tell you, for sure, that the CFTC has gotten more complaints about the manipulation in silver than the total of all complaints they have received on all other commodities combined. Still, they must receive more from you. The coming wholesale physical shortage will end the manipulation, but the regulators can end it sooner. Here are the addresses:

Wlukken@cftc.gov
Mdunn@cftc,gov
Bchilton@cftc.gov
Jsommers@cftc.gov
Alavik@cftc.gov

Dean.payton@cmegroup.com

Finally, I have a suggestion to help uncover who the big U.S. bank, or banks, might be that is short so much silver. Last week, I sent my recent article to James Dimon, CEO of JP Morgan, one of the banks thought to be short. I have not yet received a reply. For the purpose of elimination, you should contact him and ask him if his bank is short silver on the COMEX, and if so, what is the economic purpose of the trade. If he responds that JP Morgan is not short, then we can cross them off the list and move on. Please be polite but direct.

Jamie.dimon@jpmchase.com

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

You politely ripped me last time I posted--don't let your book influence your decisions, the silver shortage is a myth (Tulving is back selling again unlike last time you brought this up--he knows it's going all the way to $9).

I enjoy your site but am worried you'll go broke buying into the conspiracy theories--silver comes out of the ground for under $6 an ounce--it could settle down at $7!

Search for some sites that contradict your worldview and ponder the possibilities.

I love silver too, but I'm waiting till we crash through $9 on the downside, that's the next support.

Respectfully Your Reader,
JStudent

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Anonymous said...

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