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October
29 - Gold $428.20 up $3.50 - Silver $7.29 up 14 cents
It
is inaccurate to say I hate everything. I am strongly in favor of common
sense, common honesty,
and common decency. This
makes me forever ineligible for public office...
H.L. Mencken, writer, editor, and critic (1880-1956) GO GATA!!!
Gold
came in higher and was quickly sold off by dealers and local traders
when this US economic news hit the tape:
08:30
Q3 GDP reported 3.7% vs. consensus 4.3%; Consumption 4.6% vs.
consensus 4.6%
Price Deflator 1.3% vs. consensus 1.6%
* * * * *
As
the number was "dramatically" less than expected, you could
hear the wind sucked out of the CNBC crowd and commentators. The
immediate reaction had the S&P dropping 3, the dollar selling off,
and gold rallying. However, this was to be short-lived as The Working
Group on Financial Markets showed up on schedule to put the kibosh on
the free market traders for the moment. Immediately, those same markets
reversed course. No one knows this market adage better than the PPT:
PRICE ACTION MAKES MARKET COMMENTARY. Since the US stock market futures
rebounded so quickly, the disappointing GDP number began to fade as far
as its negative significance was concerned.
The
market then waited for other economic reports (see below), which turned
out to be better than expected. Whether it was the PPT taking this
opportunity to reduce their long exposure in the stock market, or was
just profit taking after the big run-up this week, the market's rally
after those numbers was just as short-lived as the sell-off.
Now
for the fun. No grumpy MIDAS today. Just the reverse. Jumping up and
down like a crazed hyena here. Why:
*Gold
traded in classic and picture perfect fashion today and unlike its
trading on most days over the past 3 years. After the early sell-off, it
ground its way higher very quietly, making new high after new high. It
would back and fill and then charge ahead again. It must have made 10
new highs as the day wore on and closed only 30 cents off its last high.
Not
only is that sort of trading unusual for gold, it also breaks the
pattern of making highs for the day in the first 15 minutes to an hour.
This tells me The Gold Cartel is in the most serious of trouble. This is
just what they didn't want to happen at the end of the month.
December
gold
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/GD/C4
*The
close was the highest on a monthly basis in 16 years. It took out the
March 2004 close of $427.30. To find a higher one, we need to go back to
August 1988. Gold finished at $431.30 back then. This bodes very well
for next week as big picture players like pension funds, hedge funds,
etc., will take this significant monthly close as a buying signal and
most likely will be looking to jump on board.
Gold
monthly
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/GD/M
*For
the second week in a row there was a stunning surprise in the COT
numbers released after the close. The small specs got even SHORTER. The
large spec open interest rose 12,693 contracts and the short side rose
5,712 lots. The long commercial position fell by 80 lots and their short
position rose by 3,964 lots. The small specs increased their longs by
3,462 contracts and increased their shorts by a stunning 6,399
contracts.
This
is sheer speculation on my part, however I don't believe this has ever
happened before. With gold in the most positive technical position of
all-time, the small specs are going more short. This is SO bullish as it
confirms the weak Café Sentiment Indicator and lack of interest in the
smaller golds. The public has little appetite for gold investments and
the small traders want to get more short even as we make 16-year highs.
YUMMY YUM!
*What
makes this all so powerful is it confirms what John Brimelow has been
sending our way for months; the STALKER too. That is the physical gold
market is on fire. As you will read below, JB reports the Indian
premiums to be at levels most seen on GOLD LOWS, not HIGHS. Why?
Probably because the Indians are competing against the Chinese for
supply - and against the Arabs and Russians, among others. This is why
the cabal's effort to flush out the specs keeps failing. Those buyers
are waiting to buy the dips and they aren't getting filled because of
this fierce competition for the available supply - so they are forced to
pay up.
*Silver
surged a nickel right on the bell. Morgan Stanley and other
"commercials" are trapped on the short side. To have BOTH gold
and silver close so well on Friday is extremely impressive.
*The
Café Sentiment Indicator continues its outstanding track record. For
months MIDAS has pounded the table how incredible it was to have gold
doing so well with so little public interest in the precious metals
sector. The indicator is still no better than a 5 (Max) with gold at
16-year monthly highs. Maybe when gold goes $450 bid, the public will
wake up?
*We
are so close to getting our long awaited Commercial Signal Failure with
the surging physical market doing in the crooks. That goes for silver
too.
*Not
only did gold and silver perform so nicely at such an important moment,
copper went berserk, rising 8.3 cents per pound to $1.3375 as the
warehouse stocks in Shanghai collapsed 29% out of nowhere. The copper
bears have been counting on increasing stocks around the world to make
their case. This is an Uh-Oh moment for the shorts.
From
Bloomberg on copper:
"Global
stockpiles monitored by the London Metal Exchange fell to a 14-year low,
including declines at warehouses in Singapore and New Orleans. Phelps
Dodge Corp., the largest U.S. producer, said China's copper use probably
will increase 12 percent to 15 percent this year."
*Oil
turned around too after staring at $50 per barrel, closing at $51.76, up
84 cents per barrel.
*On
top of all of this, there is increasing nervousness over the US
Presidential election next Tuesday. A very overvalued US dollar closed
on its lows and lower against every major currency. If our election ever
goes into another one of those protracted periods of determining who the
real winner is, the dollar could really tank, not that it won't anyway.
The
John Brimelow Report
Bears
prickled: AU & ABX growing Thistles?
Friday, October 29, 2004
Indian
ex-duty premiums: AM $7.36, PM $8.12, with world gold at $425.55 and
$425.95. Very ample, and lavish, for legal imports. The Indian paradox
continues: partly in celebration of the correction in oil prices, the
rupee firmed again to the highest since June 14, facilitating gold
imports.
These
are the sorts of premiums more normally associated with lows in world
gold. Unless world gold prices rise meaningfully quite soon, the world's
largest gold buyer is going to be demanding the shipment of a great deal
of physical.
On
a much smaller scale, TOCOM continues a buyer. Volume fell 40% to the
equivalent of 24,589 Comex contracts, but the active contract was up 5
yen and world gold went out $1 above NY's close. Open interest edged up
only the equivalent of 474 Comex lots, but according the Mitsubishi, the
public's long increased almost 10% to 80.1 tonnes (almost 26,000 Comex
lots). Why this is happening is not clear - the yen rose to a 6 month
high today, which is normally inimical to TOCOM gold longs - but the
trend seems set and merits watching. Gold imports into Japan have been
steadily rising for several months, and it is possible that the country
is about to stage a private gold flurry. The 2001-2 bullion buying
splurge stared much the same way, when state insurance of bank deposits
was in question, as it is once again.
New
York yesterday traded 65,532 contacts, with open interest rising 2,140
to 321,538, right back to the record high. In fact, the Bulls quietly
won an important tactical victory. UBS notes:
"In
New York yesterday, gold had a rather slow start with most professionals
short, expecting stop-losses to be triggered. Gold did dip after the
surprise Chinese interest rate increase but fewer than expected stops
were triggered and the market then posted a nasty five dollar rally to
peak at $427."
(Nasty
from whose point of view?) Refco Research smelled the coffee and covered
a reasonably profitable silver short before their target, muttering:
"it
is hard to account for gold's resilience-a third retreat from 430,
319,000+ (contracts) of open interest and a $4 dollar drop in crude oil,
but December gold spends just 15 minutes below 423?"
A
legitimate comment from an orthodox Western hemisphere perspective, e.g.
ignoring India.
Barclays
Capital's Gold analyst Kamal Naqvi, who as an India could be expected to
be aware of his country's predilections is the only writer to grasp
China:
"The
reality is that Chinese demand has not been the major driver of gold and
silver prices, so there is no direct implication from the exchange rate
hike..."
Naqvi
also points out the curious fact that hedge reducing AngloGold actually
increased the net delta of its hedge book by 6.6 tonnes this quarter
(which another observer notes may have been a mechanical response to
price changes but surely could have been offset). Combined with ABX's
derisory 200,000 oz reduction, this raises the suspicion that the hedge
books of these two firms are extremely adhesive, if not toxic. A very
prickly - indeed Thistle -y situation.
Unless
a very large and aggressive seller enters the gold market, $US prices
will have to rise. Even a bout of dollar strength might not serve,
unless the rupee is involved.
JB
John
sent out two more juicy morsels later on:
JPM's
"Metals & Energy Technical Strategist" almost always plays
gold as a short, with respectable success.. Don't readily recall such a
bullish stance, especially on a high.
"The
market has again rejected the 430.50/431 highs (3rd time this year) but
the pullbacks still look corrective to us... we can see the market
extend to new highs in the week/s ahead... we are looking to build a
long position for such a break higher, with little in the way of
important resistance till 464 and then 500!! ...only a move through
415 would really start to do damage to this view." (JB emphasis)
"Trade
Strategies: Long Gold at 426 add at 423, risking 419 targeting
440/455"
***
The
estimated volume rose 46% in last 30 minutes to 54,000.
***
This
tells us some VERY big players wanted in before the weekend, while The
Gold Cartel desperately did what they could to fend them off. Without
the cabal's relentless price-capping, gold would have erupted on the
close. However, The Gold Cartel lost the day because of the 16-year high
monthly close, one which will attract more accumulation early next week.
A move above $431 spot could usher in a torrent of buying and could
require the emptying of Fort Knox to stop a gold price explosion.
CARTEL
CAPITULATION WATCH
The
PPT fared better with their DOW propping. It rose another 23 to 10,027,
while the DOG lost 1 to 1975.
The
DOW managed to move up AGAIN and stay above the popularly important
10,000 mark even though the dollar closed late below 85 (84.98, down 38)
and crude oil reversed course to close up sharply.
December
dollar
http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/US/C4
The
euro rose .64 to 127.93 and the yen ended the day at 105.82, a new low
for the move.
US
economic news:
08:30 Q3 Employment Cost Index reported 0.9% vs. consensus 1%
Prior reading 0.9%.
* * * * *
09:46 University of Michigan Confidence reported 91.7 vs. consensus 88
-- Reuters
Prior reading 87.5.
* * * * *
NEW YORK, Oct 29 (Reuters) - U.S. consumer sentiment deteriorated in
October as rising energy costs and persistent job worries made Americans
less optimistic about the future, according to a survey released on
Friday. The University of Michigan's said its consumer confidence index
dropped to 91.7 in October, down from 94.2 in September but higher than
a mid-month reading of 87.5, according to market sources who saw the
subscription-only report. -END-
* * * * *
09:58 Oct. Chicago Purchasing Manager's reported 68.5 vs. consensus
59, says Bloomberg, citing Market News
Prior reading revised to 61.9 from 61.3.
* * * * *
10:04 Chicago PMI stronger than expected; strongest since January
1988
The 68.5% October reading was much stronger than the 59.0% consensus and
September's 61.9%. It was also the strongest reading in more than 16
years. Both the orders index and production index were very strong -
rising to 79.4% from 69.7%, and to 79.1% from 58.9%. The employment
index remained subdued, rising to 54.1% from 53.9%. These regional
indexes are quite volatile, so some caution is warranted in interpreting
the October report, but the strength is nevertheless impressive. Stocks
moved higher initially but are now pulling back: Dow +30.0. Bonds moved
lower: 10-year note (4/32) to yield 4.07%.
* * * * *
WASHINGTON, Oct 29 (Reuters) - U.S. businesses are less optimistic about
economic growth, hiring and capital spending than they were three months
ago, but high energy costs have not had a big impact on spending plans,
a survey on Friday showed.
In
the survey of 115 members of the National Association for Business
Economics, 29 percent said they were more pessimistic about economic
growth in the second half of 2004 than they had been three months
earlier, while 18 percent said they had a rosier outlook.
Just
14 percent of respondents expect the U.S. economy to grow at more than a
4 percent annual rate in the second half of 2004, down from 47 percent
who saw such robust growth in July...
The survey was taken between Oct. 11 and Oct. 22...
* * * * *
What
am I missing here? The Wall Street pundits continue to claim there is no
inflation threat in the US. Yet, the employment cost index is running at
double the rate of the Fed Funds rate, which means real interest rates
in the US are still negative and that is inflationary.
What
is going to happen to US business optimism WHEN higher energy costs DO
start making an impact on spending decisions?
Some
fun from Sarge:
Re:
seasonal and hedonic quality adjustments:
"It
is of great importance to set a resolution, not to be shaken, never to
tell an untruth.
There is no vice so mean, so pitiful, so contemptible; and he who
permits himself to tell a lie once,
finds it much easier to do it a second and a third time, till at length
it becomes habitual.
--Thomas Jefferson
Hey
Midas . . .
Anyone
ever discuss the definition of hedonic? It comes from the Greek
hedonikos, from hedone, which means "pleasure."
Ever
heard the word "hedonistic?" That's an adjective meaning
"devoted to pleasure." Hedonism is any theory that gives
PLEASURE a central role. Hedonism is the pursuit of pleasure as a matter
of ethical principal. As Wikipedia says, "The simplest form of
hedonism in ethics is "whatever causes pleasure is right".
Even that simple version immediately runs into trouble. Pleasure for
whom? Average pleasure? Is that the median or the mean? How can you make
interpersonal comparisons of pleasure, anyway? Or even cross-time
comparisons for the same person?"
Having
said that, how do we apply this to STATISTICS?
So
a hedonic quality adjustment is nothing more than number tweaking which
results in pleasure. Now who are they trying to please?? You and I?? Or
themselves??
I
think the clowns in D.C. have a misunderstood on hedonic adjustments.
They
aren't pleasing me!!
Chuck
checked in early on:
Morning.
Did you come in for the funeral? One day we'll meet, and I still believe
it will be watching the sunset over the Pacific in Puerto Vallarta,
sipping a Modelo Negra or a Margarita.
The
gold share market is getting more and more curiouser. I can't imagine
who is selling these cheapies, but it is quite extraordinary. If gold is
going to break out, we should see some real pop in Newmont and Goldcorp.
The discrepancy between them and the exploratory stocks is getting more
and more extreme. If this was occurring after a large move up, it would
be a very dangerous warning sign, but I see the opposite here.
I
wouldn't be surprised to see this happen right after the election, no
matter who wins. It's a Friday, so I never expect anything good for us,
but there is a persistence in the metals market. Chuck
Garic
hits the nail on the head:
While
I am sure most gold enthusiasts first reaction to this week in the
market is once again being disgusted at the obvious the manipulation in
Oil, Stocks and Gold, I am ecstatic. Whoever is taking the other side of
the trades by shorting gold and buying stocks during an environment of
growing stagflation spent a lot of money on a contra fundamental trend
trade. Even with all this capping Gold is set up to close at a 16
year weekly closing high and a 16 year monthly closing high. 16
years is the amount of time Barrick & J.P. Morgan have been in the
business of hedging Gold; therefore, by definition every hedge contract
ever written is under water at the end of this week and the end of this
month. J.P. Morgan just reported their poorest trading revenue in many
quarters. By definition their Gold trading books will be closing this
week and this month at new lows. Pressure will be building to make
quarterly earnings and it is clear their Gold trading tactics are
hurting.
Technically
speaking the Gold market has now completed a similar chart pattern as
it's 28 week consolidation of 2002 which setup the move from 330 to 380.
Any one who has ever studied William O'Neil's greatest winner's charts
should be drooling; a clear cup and saucer formation has formed.
The
U.S. dollar index is also closing at an 8-year weekly and monthly
closing low. Therefore, prudent foreign holders of U.S. financial assets
will be losing sleep this weekend.
As
far as the stock market is concerned every time the Dow has rallied off
of it's lows this year the VIX (Volatility index) has plunged;
theoretically from smart money shorting puts. This time it didn't
plunge. Does that mean smart money feels this is a temporary rally;
therefore, they are using this rally in the averages to cover their
short in puts. It is being reported that dollar volume of new issues
this month has been the highest since October 2000. So I went back and
took a look at October 2000. Let's remember that the economic climate
had turned down over the summer; yet, the S&P and Dow hung in going
into the election and had a significant 8 day rally at the end of
October going into the election closing Monday November 6th
the day before the election at 1432. The rest of the week was not so
good the S& P fell to a closing low of 1351 by November 13th
and continued down 21% over the next 5 months to close at 1139 on March
23rd.
So
who would you rather be: a foreign investor in American financial
assets, a stock index investor who if history repeats itself is about to
lose 21%, a J.P. Morgan account executive whose client is sitting on a
$1.8 Billion mark to market loss or an investor in Gold which just
closed at a 16 year monthly high. For all that has been said about the
open interest in Gold being large, one thing is indisputable the longs
have a profit and the shorts have a loss.
Garic
Mahendra
versus Arch Crawford:
TODAY
AT 14:15 P.M. E.S.T., ASTROLOGER ARCH CRAWFORD WAS INTERVIEWED ON CNBC
STREET SIGN.
HE PREDICTED TODAY GOLD IS AT TOP AND WILL START TO DECLINE FOR
NEXT 30 DAYS BEFORE RISING AGAIN. SAME FOR OIL.
ANY COMMENTS?
KIND REGARDS
ELMAR
My
friend Mahendra called today, pleased as punch and just as bullish as
ever on gold and silver. I'm going with him.
I'm
not watching CNBC. However, how typical. Gold makes a 16-year monthly
high close and they bring on a bear.
More
proof that mine gold supply is on the wane, while costs are rising
sharply:
JOHANNESBURG
(Mineweb.com) -- Production targets at the Ashanti operations that
AngloGold absorbed earlier this year were nearly met at in the third
quarter of 2004, but costs were substantially higher than budgeted.
The
310,000 ounce target set in the third quarter was about 13,000 ounces
short, according to Mineweb's calculations, while costs at the
mines averaged around $296/oz, compared to the $269/oz budgeted... -
END-
Last
night I had a lovely dinner at the Petroleum Club here in Dallas with my
friends Charles Pace, his pretty and brainy girl friend Kate, Ray
Foster, and Neal Foneman, CEO of Aflease in South Africa. Neal was
impressive and seems like the right man to turn this beleaguered company
around. It has been beset with investor/management turmoil, skyrocketing
energy costs, and much higher rand affiliated costs. Recently, they shut
down some gold operations which were causing a cash flow drain and have
restructured the company to concentrate on their strengths:
*A
world class Uranium resource.
*Expediting
production from their high margin gold properties and going into
production in Q2 2005.
Other
South African gold producers have been beset with similar problems.
Durban Deep is an obvious one. When gold takes off, the South African
gold producers that have been beaten up are likely to roar. Few in the
gold world envision bullion trading at $500. It will. As gold takes off
for that kind of price level, the cost problems besetting these
companies will fade in the background and their share prices will
explode.
To
read more on Aflease (35 cents on the Nasdaq pink sheets), go to www.aflease.com
There
is another enormous positive about this company. It is surrounded with
some of the brightest and most able people in the gold industry. They
are also some of my favorite people anywhere:
*Brett
Kebble, GATA's hero, who rescued Aflease via a bailout through Randgold
Resources.
*Peter
George, the Mr. Gold of South Africa, and a veteran, staunch GATA
supporter. Peter is a substantial investor in the company.
*Ferdi
Lips, ex-Swiss banker of note, who wrote Gold Wars, and has had an
exemplary career in and around the gold industry from his native Zurich.
Ferdi is a Director.
I
own Aflease and will be buying more in the near future.
One
of the most enjoyable aspects of my tenure as GATA chairman the past 6
years has been the people I've met and how many are intertwined. Neal
met with J-Pacific CEO Nick Ferris in Vancouver before coming to Dallas
and also with one of my heroes, the ubiquitous John Anderson. Japan's
legendary Tammy Matsufugi (who has one of the only gold funds in Japan
and is another GATA supporter) is a significant investor in both
J-Pacific and Aflease. Then there is GATA favorite Adam Fleming, former
Harmony chairman, whom Neal worked with years ago at Harmony. All in
all, a wonderful group of people.
The
gold shares rose with little enthusiasm and are falling way behind
bullion. The XAU gained 1.84, while the HUI rose 4.91 to 233.60.

HUI: Bigcharts
While
gold is making its 16-year monthly highs, the HUI isn't even close to
its 52-week high of 258.60.
Rarely
does a fundamental and technical set-up come together like this in such
an incredibly bullish way. There is no telling what could happen when
gold breaks through $430 decisively. It's only a matter of time before a
gold derivatives neutron bomb goes off, which could send the price up in
ballistic fashion. When and how will depend on the speed of gold's price
ascent. Stay tuned though, one is coming in the weeks or months to come.
One
more point to stress going into this sweet dreams weekend. While some of
the most sophisticated investment players in the world (like the Russian
Central Bank) know what GATA knows, your average investment manager has
never even heard of us and our work, thanks to the fact we do not have a
free financial press in the United States. They don't know half the
central bank gold is no longer there. They don't know the humongous size
of the gold short position, one which cannot be covered unless gold
rallies hundreds of dollars per ounce - and then only because the
peasants of the world take profits with their holdings and bring
thousands of tonnes of scrap to the market. They don't know about what
kind of scam The Gold Cartel has pulled on the investment world. They
will one day, but not now.
What
is important is YOU KNOW! And therefore, YOU KNOW what is coming!
GATA
BE IN IT TO WIN IT!
SMILIN'
MIDAS
Appendix
Just
sent to WSJ, Barron's, Power Lunch, Kudlow & Cramer, IBP, Bloomberg
& Street Account.
Editors,
Comex Gold Futures had a 16 year weekly and monthly closing high today.
The previous weekly closing high was 426.80 on 01-04-04. The previous
monthly closing high was 427.30 on 03-31-04. Many market observers
believe weekly and monthly closing prices are more significant than
daily closing prices because this shows true investment interest. While
the media has been reporting that Gold has been rising only because of
the falling dollar the real story in Gold is after 16 years of producer
hedging mine production is below jewelry demand. Producer hedging has
helped depress the price of Gold and thus the long range profitability
in the Gold Mining Industry. Indeed, Barrick Gold's mark to market loss
in their hedge portfolio has crossed $1.8 Billion with today's closing
prices. Third quarter earnings report from every major Gold Mining
Company showed falling production and rising costs and depressed
earnings across the board. This suggests there is little incentive to
bring more pro Garic.
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