|
March
1 – Gold $432.40 down $3.70 – Silver $7.19 down 16 cents
A
hard beginning maketh a good ending...
John Heywood "The Proverbs of John
Heywood" (1546)
GO
GATA!!!
In
the last couple of MIDAS commentaries I have done what I could to insult
the mainstream gold world as much as possible for their ineptness and
cowardly approach to dealing with the blatant manipulation of the gold
price. Might as well make it a Trifecta and up the ante at the same
time.
What
is so grating is that the mainstream gold world dolts refuse to
acknowledge the obvious modus operandi of The Gold Cartel. The cabal
bums are so organized they repeat their manipulation techniques over and
over again, like the $6 Rule – like taking gold down in the Access
Market IMMEDIATELY after a concerted price-capping effort during the
day.
Last
evening Dallas time was a perfect example. Gold was shoved 80 cents to a
buck lower not long after gold closed on Comex. The dollar then
strengthened a tad later on. When I woke up this morning, the dollar was
slightly lower, yet gold had weakened further, called down $1.40 going
into the Comex open.
Contrarily,
the S&P futures contract almost ALWAYS opens higher after a decent
sell-off. Even Richard Russell has noted how the S&P’s are almost
always called higher these days and have been for years now. The Gold
Cartel is the one at work suppressing the price of gold. It is The
Working Group on Financial Markets (PPT) who is propping up the US stock
market and influencing its price action.
On
that note Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan Chase pressed bullion right off
the bat this morning, however, sizeable orders from physical market
buyers showed up as the price took out $433. After a brief rally, The
Gold Cartel attacked again, following up on their price-capping selling
of the past week, even though both the pound and yen were modestly
higher. Today’s battering had nothing to do with the dollar. It was
all about The Gold Cartel forcing the gold price lower because the euro
gave back a piddling of its recent gains.
Today’s
outrageous manipulation is a classic example of what I have conveyed to
Café members for years. The key to the gold price action is how The
Gold Cartel uses the action of the dollar to rig the price. They go into
capping mode on various gold up days in an organized un-American
fashion, and in violation of all the US anti-trust laws. Then, they
simultaneously strike to take the price lower when the word goes out
from cabal headquarters to do so. Gold has traded this way for years.
Can it be any more obvious? If you can’t see what is going on here,
you couldn’t have the brainpower of a gnat or a
"grapefruit." Perhaps I am being too kind? Meanwhile, the fact
that commodity prices have gone berserk is completely ignored by the
dullards in the mainstream gold world. PRICE ACTION MAKES MARKET
COMMENTARY. Seems not much matters anymore to US financial markets. US
deficits, crummy dollar, soaring real inflation, etc. What does matter
is spin and market manipulation.
Gold
and silver traded like heavy stones sinking in water the entire trading
session. Rallies were non-existent. Only cash market pricing, as gold
sank towards $430, saved the day. The gold open interest rose, as fully
expected, to 287,801, up a sizeable 4271 lots. This reflects spec buying
and Gold Cartel selling to cap the price, as brought to your attention
by MIDAS yesterday. Spec longs who bought after Tuesday morning’s
limit up day gold pop are now all losers.
The
silver open interest fell by 3584 contracts to 101,630 as specs ran for
the hills, as did mega long Morgan Stanley. No surprise there either.
The
CRB rose once again, this time a mere .26 to 305.26, even though crude
oil, beans, gold, and silver were lower. Once upon a time, pre-Gold
Cartel and its price manipulation scheme, this chart would have had gold
and silver rocketing:
April
CRB http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/RB/45
The
bonds continued their dipsy-doodle, falling another 6/32 to 112 29/32.
The
dollar recouped modestly, rising .29 to 82.80 and the euro fell .57 to
131.16. The yen bucked the trend for the day and rose to 104.32.
The
John Brimelow Report
Heavy Turkish buying; Heavy selling by ???
Tuesday, March 01, 2005
Indian
ex-duty premiums
: $6.18, PM $6.03, with world gold at $434.50 both times. Comfortable
for legal imports. The Reserve Bank has been actively repressing the
rupee, regrettably, from the point of view of gold’s friends.
Turkish
imports for February, posted this morning on the Istanbul Gold
Exchange’s website, were huge. At 29.411 tonnes, they were the third
highest in the 9 2/3 years the Exchange records, despite $US weighted
average prices, according the Exchange, being the 4th
highest. February imports were 11.7% up on January and 35% above Feb
’04: $US gold was down 0.3% and up 4.7% respectively. Turkish Lira
prices were -3.2% and +2%.
No
doubt this quantity reflects a powerful response to the effort to break
gold down in the first week of the month: but overall it is clear that
the propensity of the Middle East to import gold has shifted. No wonder
gold refused to break $400.
The
ECB reported today that two subordinate Central Banks sold gold last
week (a third bought coin); the net proceeds were E99Mm. This suggests
about 9.4 tonnes, the highest this year. At an estimated 31.7 tonnes,
the ECB zone sales in February are about equal to Turkey’s imports.
With
world gold showing no resilience this morning, ("…spot gold was
well offered by dealers" – Mitsubishi) TOCOM essentially stepped
out of the market. On volume only equal to 13,014 Comex (-57%) open
interest was static (up 338 Comex); the active contract was down 11 yen
and world gold went out $1.60 below NY. (Yesterday NY traded 47,718
lots; open interest jumped another 4,271 lots – 13.28 tonnes.)
Yesterday,
according to ScotiaMocatta, gold
"436.10/436.60
in New York and made a steady climb...A new high for 2005
(437.90/438.40) was posted before drifting back off on local selling.
Selling from overseas sources then started to weigh on the market
causing a sell off…"
The
net effect of this was that it took over 13 tonnes of net buying to
raise the gold price $1.50. In the past four business days, Comex has
added 15,570 contracts of open interest (48.7 tonnes) to add $3.10 to
the April contract... Plainly, there is a large seller about.
The
Gartman Letter has noticed this:
"…there
was selling yesterday at $437-438 which proved quite formidable;
however, rather than direct gold selling we suspect this was simply
profit taking correlative with the strength in the US dollar…. We look
for short term support at the $431.50-433.00 level today and we doubt
that that support shall be broken."
Profit
taking, of course, would reduce, not increase, open interest. As
Mitsui-Sydney ingenuously remarked this morning:
"…offshore
buying meant gold was firm all day, pressuring resistance & some
good size traded. Overnight it was pretty similar, however the flows
were lighter. The question now is, with so much pressure being applied
to the topside, what is holding gold back?"
Gold
seems to be back in the 2001-2004 mode, with successive levels being
ferociously defended, but eventually being overcome by rising physical
offtake. That is what the Turkish data implies. From that perspective,
the key development in gold this year has been the loss of downward
momentum developed by the Great Liquidation of January.
The
noted gold bear joins with a number of commentators – Gartman, Don
Hays, various Neoconservative political writers, to proclaim peace is
breaking out in the Middle East. This observation seems fashionable –
or popular - at present. I doubt he is naive enough to believe it.
JB
CARTEL
CAPITULATION WATCH
As
usual the US stock market rebounded after a spanking. The DOW recouped
most of yesterday’s losses, gaining 64 to 10,830. The DOG did better,
jumping 19 to 2071. Liquidity is the name of the game. At some point
reality is going to set in and this market is going to come hurtling
down. Hard to know what will be the catalyst and when, however, it is
coming. Denial and spin only goes so far. With inflation and interest
rates on the rise, corporate profits are going to be squeezed. The
rigging of the gold price to mask the true inflation barometer in the US
will only go so far in this environment.
Platts:
New
York (Platts)--1Mar2005/351 pm EST/2051 GMT
Analysts were at
a loss to explain the
decline in gold, even as
Iraqui violence escalated… –END-
These
analysts need to sign up for a www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
membership. It would prevent them from remaining clueless.
US
economic news:
09:59
Jan. Construction Spending reported 0.7% vs. consensus 0.4%
Prior reading revised to 1.2% from 1.1%.
* * * * *
10:00
Feb. ISM Prices Paid reported 65.5 vs. consensus 67.5
Prior reading 69.
* * * * *
Feb. ISM Manufacturing reported 55.3 vs. consensus 56.9
Prior reading was 56.4.
* * * * *
Marsh
Has $676 Mln Loss, Cuts Dividend and 2,500 Jobs
- March 1 (Bloomberg) -- Marsh & McLennan Cos., the world's largest
insurance broker, slashed its dividend and planned 2,500jobs cuts after
reporting a $676 million loss from settling NewYork Attorney General
Eliot Spitzer's bid-rigging accusations. -END-
March
1 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese household spending had the biggest increase in
nine months in January and the world's second- largest economy created
the most jobs since 1992, adding to evidence a recession is ending.
Spending
by households headed by a salaried worker rose 8.2 percent from
December, seasonally adjusted, the statistics bureau said today in
Tokyo. The economy added 470,000 jobs, helping the unemployment rate
hold at a six-year low of 4.5 percent.
An
improving job market and higher year-end bonuses boosted confidence
among consumers, prompting them to spend more at Takashimaya Co.'s
department stores and Skylark Co.'s restaurants. Japan needs a rebound
in consumer demand, which makes up half the economy, to wean it from
dependence on exports and corporate investment for growth.
A
Tale of Two CPI Cities:
First,
the US spin version:
U.S.
economy still has output gap-Fed's Moskow
WASHINGTON,
March 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. economy still has excess labor and
production capacity, Chicago Federal Reserve Bank President Michael
Moskow said on Tuesday, adding that oil price rises have yet to spill
into underlying inflation.
"My
own judgment is there still are excess resources in the economy, both
certainly on the labor market side and in facilities, plants and
equipment," Moskow told reporters after a speech to a National
Association of State Workforce Agencies forum in Washington.
"So
I personally think there still is an output gap. I think it is closing
and that we are growing at about potential growth, but I don't think it
has closed at this point. But it is something we have to keep monitoring
on a regular basis."
Earlier,
he told the audience oil prices have not yet pushed up prices excluding
food and energy.
"If
you look at that core rate, you have not seen a significant increase in
that core rate over this period when oil prices have gone up,"
Moskow said. "Now if it gets to the point where people believe that
inflation overall and core inflation will be higher because of that
higher price of oil then that's a very important consideration for us as
monetary policy-makers."…
Then,
the real version via a fellow Café member professor:
The
big-brained guys at Contrary Investor, authors of some of my most
treasured Off-Wall-Street reading, have taken on the veracity of the CPI
and concluded the numbers are boiled beyond recognition (go
figure)...
http://www.safehaven.com/article-2672.htm
What
is curious about this article is they also take on the question that I
have found perplexing for years: Are people who cite the CPI numbers as
accurate simply morons? Do they think we are morons? The Contrary
Investors conclude that the answer is no, but rather some (the Feds at
least) are using a "Don't ask don't tell" policy for
convenience. A couple of you prominent folks are forced to cite bogus
numbers: Is there no alternative?
Seems
to me that investors will eventually demand transparency above all else
or they will take their capital and go home (or back to Asia).
Just
trying to share good stuff culled from obscure places with folks who
might care (and maybe make a difference)...
Best
regards
Dave
BTW-The
smartest guy I ever met was a bean picker with a third grade education,
and some of the biggest nimrods had PhD's in chemistry. With that said,
these Contrary Investor folks do appear to have strong
credentials. (Check out the blurb at the bottom of the article. It's
kind of inspiring.)
David
B. Collum
Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology
Cornell University
Which
takes us to the latest development on this CPI controversy:
Bill:
I figure I can do Moskow one better! If they can spin, so can
we....
News
Alert
February 28, 2005
AP NEWS (Houston)
Renowned
commodity trader Dan Norcini stunned the investing world today when he
asserted that elephants roost in trees. Norcini, famed for his sometimes
bewildering comments, confidently claimed that he had seen a dozen
elephants sitting in the tops of the water oak trees surrounding his
estate. So assured was he, that investors all around the world are now
questioning whether he might be true.
"Norcini
is one strange bird," quipped a pit trader in the S&P,
"but he is a smart guy and anything he says has to be given
thoughtful consideration."
News
Alert
March 1, 2005
AP NEWS (Houston)- UPDATE
There
has been a rash of sightings of elephants roosting in trees that has
left authorities shaken and dazed.
"Calls
are coming out of the woodwork", commented a deputy sheriff who is
a member of a special task force created to handle the sightings.
The
unusual development began after a famous commodity trader, Dan Norcini,
announced that he has seen the elephants with his own eyes. While
Norcini was not available for further comment, his attorney, Talkem N.
TU. Anything, with the law firm of Doowey, Cheatum and Howe, stated that
his client is completely convinced of the matter and has no reason to
fabricate such a story.
More
from Houston's Dan Norcini:
Bill;
We keep getting more and more of these reports detailing the squeeze
that manufacturers are under as a result of rising input costs.
Here's
another one, this time its Caterpillar. You had to wonder when they
would finally cry, "Uncle," and hike costs. This is precisely
the kind of thing one should expect to see accompany a rising CRB index
and why I believe the deflation proponents will be proven wrong. Anyone
who deals in steel knows all too well what I am talking about. It is a
component in so many different manufactured goods that it is almost
pointless to even attempt to list them - automobiles, heavy equipment,
construction products, military equipment and armament, etc...
All
one has to do is to simply think about the rising costs associated with
soaring base metal prices and plastics which have their source in crude
oil to realize that Caterpillar is not the exception; they are the rule
and a sign of things to come.
It
is also the very reason why the deliberately deceitful comments made by
Greenspan, Bernanke and other various Fed governors such as the one I
sent you earlier from Moskow are so patently absurd.
To
assert, as they have so brazenly done, in the face of a rising CRB index
and a soaring PPI (even in spite of its inadequacy) that inflation is
"well anchored" or "contained" and that the CPI is
not reflecting any pass through to end users by manufactures should
strain the credulity of even the most ignorant of analysts. Yet, that is
exactly what we do not see - on the contrary, we see the stupid lemmings
swallowing the the purple Kool-Aid and parroting the official sector
line that inflation is simply not a threat. "How do we know
that?", they confidently assert. "Why just look at the price
of gold. If it were a serious threat, gold would be reacting violently
upward." Meanwhile they shovel the yellow stuff into the market as
fast as they can find it in an attempt to meet the voracious demand and
try to keep it from exploding upward to reflect reality.
Maybe
we should pass on some advice to our friend Dennis Gartman and ask him
to do himself and his hedge fund clients a favor by putting down the
Kool-Aid long enough to let the cobwebs clear from his mind. That and
some fresh air might bring him to his senses.
Dan
Caterpillar
to increase prices 1-5 percent
CHICAGO,
March 1 (Reuters) - Heavy equipment maker Caterpillar Inc. said on
Tuesday it will increase machinery and engine prices by 1 percent to 5
percent effective in late spring due to rising costs of steel and other
raw materials.
"This
price action, first announced to dealers worldwide this morning, is in
line with general economic conditions and industry factors," the
company said in an 8-K form filed with federal regulators. Caterpillar
shares rose 1 percent in morning trading.
Caterpillar
Chief Executive Jim Owens had told Reuters Friday in an interview that
the company might raise product prices again to cover escalating prices
for steel and other raw materials.
The
world's largest maker of construction and mining equipment had raised
prices by about 3 percent in July and another 3 percent in January to
offset rising costs.
Caterpillar,
based in Peoria, Illinois, has been deluged with orders in the past year
due to the economic recovery, rising commodity prices and accelerated
federal tax breaks. It has come under fire from investors, however,
because it hasn't been able to translate those sales into profits as
quickly as expected due to production bottlenecks and higher raw
material costs…
The
REALLY big news of the day came out of Dubai – not only for GATA, but
the entire gold world. Read on and and I will comment why below:
Hello
Bill,
we had the chance for a short shake hands at the New Orleans Investment
conference 2 years ago. Attached is a study about the planned unified
GCC currency and gold, which I wrote for the Gulf Research Council, in
case it is interesting for you.
All the best from Dubai, Eckart
Dr. Eckart Woertz
Vice President Fixed Income and
Structured Products
CFC Securities Limited
P.O. Box 2260
4/F Al Attar Business Tower
Sheikh Zayed Road
Dubai, UAE
The
Role of Gold in the Unified GCC Currency
The manipulation of the gold market since the Nineties
Various
studies have come to the conclusion that gold is severely underpriced.
They expect a gold price of at least USD 700; some estimates even reach
USD 1500 and more. The chosen approaches are manifold and include
comparisons between the gold price and money supply (M3), long term
ratios of the gold price with oil and stock markets, supply and demand
figures in the gold market or the
39-
See Al-Alkim, op.cit., chapter 3-6.
40-
Ugo Fasano and Zubair Iqbal, "Common Currency. GCC Countries Face
Fundamental Choices as they head for Monetary Union," Finance
and Development 39, no. 4 (December 2002), available under
www.imf.org/ external/pubs/ft/fandd/2002/12/fasano.htm, p. 2.
hypothetical
amount of gold needed for a reintroduction of a gold cover clause. 41
Although the liquidity driven stock market frenzy and serious currency
crisis in some emerging markets (Mexico, Asia, Russia) supported the US
dollar in the 1990s and thus reduced the attractiveness of gold, the
sell off in gold between 1996 and 2001 that propelled it below USD 260
is highly suspicious, as it happened during a time of increasing supply
deficits in the gold market. This has led a number of distinguished
experts who are affiliated with the Gold Antitrust Action Committee
(GATA) 42 to assume that Western central and commercial banks have
manipulated the gold market since the middle of the 1990s in order to
defend the paper dollar standard. Such interference is quite reminiscent
of the gold market interventions in the sixties during the establishment
of the Gold Pool. The evidence collected encompasses comparisons between
different kind of statistics and issuers, historical probabilities and
standard deviations as well as anecdotal material about more or less
obvious efforts to suppress the gold price. While this is not the place
to discuss the material in great detail,43 it is important to be aware
of the basic argument and its implications for the future gold price,
should the paper dollar standard deteriorate further.
Based
on 2000 figures, Frank Venoroso challenges the official statistics of
Gold Fields Mineral Services (GFMS) and the World Gold Council (WGC) and
assumes that annual mine
41-
Van Eeden, op. cit.; Tim Wood, "Gold-oil link all but dead in
2004," (August 10, 2004): www.mineweb.net /sections/energy/oilgold.htm;
H. Reginald Howe, "Dow/Gold Ratio=1 at 3000$: Don’t Laugh!,"
under www.goldensextant.com/ commentary5.html; Frank Veneroso,
"Facts, Evidents and Logical Inference. A Presentation on Gold/
Supply/ Demand, Gold Derivatives and Gold Loans," (May 2001):
www.gata.org/fv.pdf; Bill Fox, op. cit., p. 18.
42-
GATA was founded in 1999, see. www.gata.org.
43-
Frank Veneroso, Reginald H. Howe, Mike Bolser and James Turk have
conducted the most important studies so far. For a thorough compilation,
see John Embry and Andrew Hepburn, "Not Free and Not Fair. The
Long-Term Manipulation of the Gold Price," Sprott Asset Management
Special Report, August 2004 under: www.sprott.com.
production
(2,568 t), scrap supply (602 t) and official central bank sales under
the Washington Agreement of 1999 (400 t) are only partly covering an
estimated world wide demand of 4,844t. Venoroso thinks that the supply
gap of about 1,274 t and the supply gaps of preceding years have been
closed by leased central bank gold. That leads him to the breathtaking
thesis that instead of the officially acknowledged 5,000 t on lease and
swap arrangements, up to 16,000 t of a total of 28,000 t may have
actually left the vaults of central banks. Venoroso points out that the
gold carry trade that started in the 1980s gradually went out of hand.
Thereby, central banks are leasing gold to the commercial banks for a
low leasing rate of about 1%. The commercial banks sell the gold in the
market and invest the proceeds in higher yielding assets like
treasuries, thereby earning a nice spread. As the commercial banks now
have a delivery risk of physical gold to the central bank, they can
hedge themselves against a gold price rise by going long on the
derivative markets. Mining companies, proprietaries trading desks and
hedge funds have taken the short side of these trades. Thus, on a
limited base of physical gold, a gargantuan mountain of derivatives has
developed. And this mountain continues to grow, although mining
companies have reduced their hedges dramatically in recent years.44 To
put it in a nutshell, the gold still exists in the books of central
banks as receivables, and on the books of hedge funds and commercial
banks as liabilities. But the actual physical gold itself has long left
the vaults and now hangs around the necks of the women of the world.
These women are the "ultimate longs" in the market while the
banking system stays out in the rain with a gigantic derivative short
position of up to 16,000 t.
44-
It is estimated that the notional value of derivative "paper
gold" is 10 times higher than yearly physical production and nearly
as high as all official sector gold. H. Reginald Howe, "Gold or
Dross? Political Derivatives in Campaign 2000," August 2000,
www.goldensextant.com/campaign 2000.html#anchor48727 and Howe,
"Hitting the Iceberg," December 20, 2003,
www.goldensextant.com/ commentary 26.html#anchor25233.
At
current prices, it is inconceivable that this short position could be
covered. A much higher gold price would be needed. This, in turn, would
not only seriously hurt the profits of the banking system but would also
endanger the already ailing paper dollar whose liquidity is fuelling the
US and world economy alike. This is why Veneroso, Embry and others
assume that an official sector of central and commercial banks has
started to manage the gold price at least since the plight of the LTCM
hedge fund in 1998, which purportedly held a huge short-position in
gold. Occurring trading patterns suggest that apart from lending
physical gold into the market, the gold price is suppressed by
derivative short selling and spread trading. Similar accusations exist
in the case of silver.45
This
management will ultimately fail, as the supply gap will increase rather
than decrease.46 Gold production is expected to decline significantly in
coming years as mining companies reduced their investments in new
projects during the last decade of suppressed prices. As a mining
project needs 5-8 years to mature to production, this will not change
anytime soon. Groundbreaking new technologies that could raise the
output drastically like the discovery of cyanidation in 1887 are not
likely. And epochal new discoveries like those in USA, Australia and
South Africa in the 19th century47 can also not be expected, as nowadays
such terra
45-
The case for silver is even more compelling, as there exists a supply
gap since the beginning of the eighties and there are no central bank
reserves. Silver the "poor man’s gold", played a role in
monetary systems until the 19th century and is also an important raw
material in the electronic industry. Its long-term historic ratio to
gold is 1:15, which is way above the current 1:60 and could even lead to
steeper rises in price than gold. It remains to be seen if it could
regain monetary importance during the unfolding crisis of the paper
dollar standard, but as its use is not exclusively monetary we leave it
aside here. For the manipulation story of silver, see the various
articles of Ted Butler on www.investmentrarities.com/tbarchives.html.
For silver as an investment case, see Marion Butler, "The Case for
Silver," October 19, 1999: www.goldeagle.com/editorials_99/mbutler101899.html
and various articles on www.silver-investor.com.
46-
Rhona O’Connell, "Gold demand growth outstrips production,"
November 25, 2004, www.mineweb.net/ sections/gold_silver/393445.htm.
47-
See Peter L. Bernstein, The Power of Gold…, op.cit., pp.
219-238.
incognita
of mining does not longer exist. On the demand side, Western investment
demand has not even kicked in yet like it did in the 1970s, while retail
demand in important markets like India, Arabia and Asia remains stable
or is even rising despite augmented gold prices. Additionally, other
central banks than the Western ones are actually buyers (e.g. China,
Russia, Argentina), as they need to diversify their dangerously
one-sided currency reserves.48 That is especially true for China, which
is sitting on a huge pile of USD 500 billion in currency reserves, while
officially having gold reserves of only 1.6% of that amount (Table 3).
Actually there are repeated rumours that in recent years China may have
bought more than the 200 t that it officially acknowledges, and the
reopening of the Shanghai gold market in 2001 after over fifty years of
closure may not be accidental. Finally, Japan has announced that it may
purchase gold as well, in order to diversify its similarly one-sided
currency reserves (USD 800 BN).
The
likely outcome is the current manipulation scheme of the gold price will
fail like the Gold Pool in the sixties. Once it fails, it will be highly
difficult and expensive to accumulate a gold reserve. This is especially
true for central banks that have low gold reserves like those in the GCC
countries.
Shrewd
women and unprepared Central Banks: Private and official gold holdings
in the GCC countries...
To
read this special gold report in its entirety, go to:
The
Role of Gold Digital.pdf
Why
is this SUCH A BIG DEAL?
*The
last market manipulation paragraph says it all.
*This
report is now circulating all over the Arab world to the right people,
including the Middle East Arab central bankers, the sheiks, the money
manager advisors, etc.
*The
report acknowledges GATA is correct in our basic assertions.
*This
report enhances GATA’s credibility enormously and ranks right up there
with the Sprott Report (http://www.gata.org/SprottPressRelease.html)
and Russian central bank paper (http://www.gata.org/RCBTakesNote.html)
read at the LBMA conference last June.
*The
report is also a HOME RUN for GATA as far as Gold Rush 21 (www.GoldRush21.com)
is concerned. One of the goals of GR 21 is to get the word out to the
investment world re GATA’s assertions, especially that half the
central bank gold is no longer there. Once the investment world
understands GATA is RIGHT and we know what we are talking about, there
will be a rush for gold like never seen before. This distinguished paper
will go a long way to assist GATA achieving this objective, which in
turn, will help make YOU a fortune.
*Most
importantly, this revealing document by Dr. Woertz details reasons for
the wealthy Arabs and their institutions to load their gold boat NOW.
This WILL have a major impact as far as the gold price is concerned in
the weeks and months to come. John Brimelow reports above on the
"huge" gold demand emanating out of Turkey, which represents
Arab gold demand. Wait until they read this report. With $50 to $60 oil,
they have money to burn.
OK,
are you happy with what happened to gold and silver today? Are you happy
with what your gold shares are doing? Are you happy you are being
fleeced day after day by a bunch of crooks? If not, DO SOMETHING ABOUT
IT. Shame on you if you have not called up the gold company CEO’s to
urge them to attend Gold Rush 21 – especially the majors. The more
shareholders these CEOs hear from, the more likely it is they will
consider attending. This paper ought to make it a lot easier for you to
persuade them why they should be there. Please send them all a copy,
even if by email. This is a MUST read for every gold company CEO. Make
sure to call them back in a week and ask them their opinion of what is
offered regarding the gold price manipulation in the paper and to back
up their own opinions should they differ.
You
might also let them know that Tami Matsufuji, President of Jipangu and
Japan's "Mr.Gold," is coming all the way from Tokyo to Dawson
City in the Yukon to attend Gold Rush 21. What could be their excuse for
not coming?
You
can sit there and moan and groan about what The Gold Cartel elitists are
doing to you, or effect a CHANGE. Up to you.
Not
only is the gold demand news positive coming from the Arab world, it
continues to build in India also:
Yellow
Metal to be Traded in Paper Form
Business
Standard, Mumbai
Tuesday, March 01, 2005
Story
link
The
Union finance minister today announced that the Securities Exchange
Board of India (Sebi) and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) would work out
the modalities for mutual funds to float gold-backed units which would
be traded on exchanges.
These
Gold Exchange Traded Funds (GETFs) will enable households to buy and
sell gold in units for as little as Rs 100.
In
fact, it was Benchmark Mutual Fund which first mooted a scheme of this
sort around three years back but the idea did not find favour with RBI,
as it felt that the prices of gold could be manipulated and it would
destabilise the market. Sebi, incidentally, did not have any problems
with the scheme.
Exchange-traded
gold funds are a step in the direction of real estate funds and other
commodity-backed funds.
Ashutosh
Bishnoi, chief marketing officer at UTI Mutual Fund, said, "The
necessary mechanism for this has to be put in place. The first step in
this direction should be to securitise gold as an asset since the funds
cannot hold them in physical form."..
Rhody
on leasing:
Hi
Bill,
Gold lease rates
are still in backwardation, but only in the very near term.
The rate curve is
still relatively elevated and flat suggesting continued leasing activity
at above average levels.
Silver
near term rates dropped by 25% from .20% to .15%, as did two and three
month terms by .04%. Leased silver is not the source of spot silver
price weakness today.
Regards, Rhody.
http://www.kitco.com/market/lfrate.html
This
next report on gold is one of the most worthless I have ever read. Most
of the commentary is bullish, yet concludes gold is heading back to
$350. What garbage. I only bring it to your attention because it is
circulating all over and I was asked to comment.
World
economy: Commodities - Our forecast for gold
COUNTRY
BRIEFING
FROM THE ECONOMIST INTELLIGENCE UNIT
..In
2005 the gold price will on average rise by 6% along with a continuing
weakening of the US dollar against the euro. Although much of these
gains will be reversed in 2006, gold will maintain a US$400/oz plus
price range. Over the medium to longer term, the gold price is expected
to fall back to trade around US$350/oz, just below its long-run average
price…
http://www.viewswire.com/index.asp?layout=display_article&doc_id=1348077934
Compare
that piece of junk to that of the paper by Dr. Eckart Woertz in Dubai.
Anecdotal
input on gold demand coming from Joe and Jane in Canada:
Dear
Bill, I just want to tell you how much I enjoyed Monday's Midas, the
best and most encouraging in recent memory. I was especially reassured
as I bought some DROOY below a buck on Friday not completely sure at the
time but glad I did in hindsight. Word is getting around my cousin who
is the food and beverage manager at the Barrie country club tells me
that precious metals are being talked about. Also I was at the local
Chrysler dealership and came across a plumbing customer of mine, a
retired successful furniture store owner who told me in passing to
invest in Gold, wow that really made my day, this guy has a network of
equal peers and a daughter who is a federal member of parliament in
Ottawa. Yes Bill, I believe our patience will pay off soon and I am
looking forward to the greatest investment opportunity (especially
Silver) in the history of mankind.
Sincerely
grateful, Kim.
The
gold shares fell as is to be expected. The XAU lost 1.71 to 97.20 and
the HUI gave up 4.80 to 210.52, barely holding 210 support with a 209.97
low.
HUI
(view
chart)
The
Gold Cartel is making life miserable for us gold bulls. While their
market rigging is often noticeable, rarely has their price-capping
manipulation been THIS obvious for so many days in a row. Clearly, the
cabal is petrified of the price of gold moving higher when inflation in
the US is so rampant. Short-term anything can happen to the prices of
gold and silver. However, the die is cast. The market manipulating bums
are on a short lease:
*with
commodity prices on a scamper and likely to continue to be on one for
months to come.
*and with the worldwide demand for physical gold so stout and becoming
more so as each week goes by.
The
prices of gold and silver are going MUCH higher.
GATA
BE IN IT TO WIN IT!
MIDAS
Appendix
Early
feedback on the gold report by Dr. Eckart Woertz:
Bill,
I just read March 1st Midas. The Woertz paper is absolutely sensational.
I have lived in various countries in the Middle East for 12 years in
total. What people have to realize is that gold in the Middle East is
part of the culture. When you go to the shopping districts (Souks) there
are rows and rows of shops selling gold. Their windows are completely
yellow with the gold jewelry on display. Middle Easterners buy gold like
Westerners buy electronic gadgets…gold is bought as presents, wedding
dowries, investment, a pick-me-up purchase when feeling blue etc. You do
not have to educate ANYONE in the Middle East as to how valuable gold
is. Even the guy who sweeps the street hankers after gold. In the West
you have a hard job convincing people that a brick of gold is a hell of
a lot better to have than a flat screen TV or gaggle of Google shares.
This report will not be mocked by the Arab press, or joked about on Arab
websites as “conspiratorial propaganda.” This will fall on fertile
ground.
I
have just marked March 1st on my calendar as an historical day in this
unfolding bull market.
Cheers,
Adrian
Mover
Mike long term subscriber of LeMetropoleCafe.Com
posted this critique of Lawrence Kudlow today.
Tuesday,
March 01, 2005
The
Truth, Lawrence Kudlow. The Truth!
And
here's the dumbest quote of the day, courtesy of Lawrence Kudlow of Kudlow's
Money Politic$ Noting that the Commodity Research Bureau index of
raw material futures has not been at these levels since 1981 and then we
had 10% inflation and 2% today
Yes,
sometimes commodities flash inflation-warning signals. But other times
commodities are better used as indicators of the global economy. Today
it is the world economy that is placing higher raw material demands on
commodity prices, not inflation.
If
demand is causing an increase in commodity prices, those increased
prices get passed along in all uses of that commodity and we experience
rising prices. If the price of oil goes from $25 per barrel to $50 per
barrel everything made from oil is going to reflect that raw material.
Now, technically inflation is really an increase in the amount of money
in circulation. Greenspan has increased the money supply at a faster
rate than any of his predecessors, credit creation has exploded, yet the
government tells us there is no inflation. Rather than deny the truth,
Kudlow wants us to believe something silly. He should ask himself who
benefits with official inflation at only 2%? He should look to the prime
indicator of inflation, Gold, and ask why is the government deliberately
capping the price. He should ask why gold can only go up $6.00 in a day,
but can fall any amount. Who benefits by keeping our alarm bells silent.
You and I buy things every day and we know the truth. We are. Mike
Landfair
The
Korelin Economics Report Welcomes Bob Dickinson
www.kereport.com
Bob
Dickinson, Chairman of Hunter-Dickinson, joined Paul and I on the latest
edition of The Korelin Economics Report. Helping us inaugurate our new
recording studio, Bob gave our listeners an overview of his
organization, which serves as the umbrella for eight successful publicly
traded mining companies. Knowing that our audience would want to hear
the current status of the Pebble Project, the primary asset of Northern
Dynasty Minerals Ltd. (Amex: "NAK" and TSXV: "NDM"),
Bob then spent the second segment of the program discussing Pebble and
why it will probably evolve into the largest asset of its type in the
world.
Bob
Dickinson, introduced to us by Shaun and Scott Gibson of Gibson and
Company – a Vancouver based marketing firm, is one of the most
interesting and respected folks in our industry. It was a pleasure to
visit with him and learn not only about his organization, but also about
his background and his passion for the resource industry. Click on www.kereport.com
and see if you don’t share our enthusiasm.
In
each of our next two segments we featured new guests. We believe that
you will find both of these individuals to be valuable additions to our
program.
Joe
Martin of Cambridge House introduced us to Jim Willie, editor of The Hat
Trick Letter. In the third segment Jim gave listeners a brief tutorial
on Petrodollars and explained why talk by OPEC governments of switching
to Euros as a base currency gives US politicians the jitters.
Jeff
Ferguson, a private economist from Gig Harbor, Washington, made a strong
case in the fourth segment for his assertion that the manipulation of
interest rates is the most damaging form of government market
intervention, and the major underlying cause of business cycles. He went
on to discuss the reasoning for his belief that the economic conditions
prior to the Great Depression of 1929 are here again today. He also
discussed why he feels gold stocks provide safety for investors in the
current financial environment. To read an excellent commentary by Jeff,
simply click on "complete commentary" found on the Korelin
Economics Report website.
*
* * * * * *
Alexander
Korelin is the co-host of The Korelin Economics Report along with
Paul Warren. This program is syndicated nationally on Talkstar and can
also be listened to on the Internet by going to www.kereport.com
and clicking on "recent programs". Guests pay no fees to
appear on the program and neither Mr. Korelin nor Mr. Warren own any
stock in the companies discussed unless it is fully disclosed.
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