|
August
26 - Gold $436.80 down $1.10 - Silver $6.67 down 13 cents
I
have enclosed a quote I got from my father back in the ‘60’s. It is
my favorite and has always inspired me to try and do a little more.
Doug
Schwartz
Ephraim
WI
"On
the plains of hesitation bleach the bones of countless millions who at
the dawn of victory, sat down to rest and resting, died."
Anonymous
What
we saw today not only was disgusting, but extremely ominous. The US
financial market system, after years of market manipulation, is about to
become unhinged, unglued. The net worth of the average American will
take hits like they haven’t seen since the 1987 crash and eventually
could resemble something similar to what occurred in 1929. Most likely
not that disastrous in fact, but will feel that way to many.
Much
of what MIDAS and a number of other Café contributors have brought to
you attention is now quickly coming to pass. At the center of the
nightmare for Joe and Jane American is the rigging of the gold price. We
all know about Reg Howe’s Gibson’s Paradox and the relationship
between US interest rates and the price of gold. Had gold been allowed
to trade freely, the price of gold would be hundreds of dollars higher,
perhaps even $500 per ounce higher. US interest rates would be much,
much higher too.
The
US stock market would be much lower and the US real estate market would
never have reached the bubble stages it has now. The major problem for
US stock market/real estate investors is they have made investment
decisions based on an illusion, based on enormous market manipulations
which have created an atmosphere, or perception, that little can go
wrong; one in which fear has been taken out of the market equation; and
one which has encouraged the taking of investment risks they would not
have taken had US financial markets (especially gold) been left to trade
freely.
What
we saw today in the US financial markets, along with the accompanying
news, strongly suggests the "S" is quietly hitting the fan.
The Orwellians, The Gold Cartel, the Washington power structure, and the
bigwigs on Planet Wall Street are petrified by what they see on the
horizon in the VERY near future. Surely, this is one of the reasons the
Fed will be meeting with the largest 14 credit derivatives players on
September 15.
What
other explanation could there be for their manic defense of $440 gold?
Gold came in steady this morning. When the cabal would not let gold rise
along with a sinking dollar, the funds puked their longs, taking spot
down to $435.20. The trade turned massive buyer and within 15 minutes
gold was up 50 cents on the day, eventually rising to $440 bid on the
bulliondesk. Gold would have never traded this way in years gone by.
Something is different here. That’s when the crooks attacked again,
taking gold right back down to up slightly on the day.
Meanwhile,
the cabal forces continued working silver over, breaking it down
completely from a technical viewpoint. It is one of the worst looking
charts you will ever see. But, how strange. The silver fundamentals are
as firm as ever and the prices of oil and copper are at all-time highs.
The CRB is right off its multi-decade high. Don’t know how the cabal
is engineering this silver take down, but they have inducing specs to
load up on the short side in the process. Yesterday’s open interest
rose a sizeable 3833 contracts to 121,671.
Once
again the funds long gold, seeing the cap The Gold Cartel put on the
price, began to dump their longs, especially after noticing how silver
was crumbling. After all, if a market is not allowed to go up, then why
be long? Thus, in typically inspired Gold Cartel fashion, gold sold off
very late on a Friday afternoon after trading higher for 90% of the day.
However, the price bent. It did not break, as the trade showed up on the
buy side, as they have done for days on setbacks.
What
does all this mean?
The
powers mentioned above are scared to death to let gold rise above their
defense point because they fear it could set off derivatives neutron
bombs in both the gold and credit markets. At the same time, the trade
shorts are very nervous to remain that way for much longer. The gold
fundamentals become more positive by the day. The bad guys are having
trouble coming up with enough physical gold to meet demand and it is
having an impact on how they operate.
No
sense repeating what MIDAS has presented all week. Gold remains in
explosive mode. What the cabal is doing can be compared to a kid trying
to keep a rubber ball under water. It won’t work for any length of
time. There is too much pressure for the price to rise, and to do so
substantially.
As
mentioned yesterday, gold will not just blissfully rise above this $440
level, like a normal, free market would. It will either fail, or blow
through it. A close near $439 today would have been ideal. The Gold
Cartel knew that might lead to panic trade short-covering by Monday, so
they called out reinforcements nearing the Comex bell to take gold down
and make a gold price explosion through $440 less likely Monday morning.
Perhaps
The Gold Cartel can blow out all the specs and take gold down to $420
like the mob thinks. I doubt it. My bet is sometime soon the dam breaks
and the price of gold streaks towards $500 per ounce.
The
gold open interest rose 4444 contracts to 330,070 as the cabal crowd
increased its defense of $440.
Silver
makes no sense. It probably is as good a value buy here, especially as
to what other commodity related prices are doing, than at any time in
history. My guess is that this is an engineered false breakdown that
will not last long at all. Once silver takes out $6.85, it will streak
for $8.
The
dollar was weak most of the day until near the end. Oddly enough,
perhaps predictably enough would be more appropriate, I could find no
plausible reason for the dollar strength, as the news was bearish. The
dollar closed at 87.83, up .27.
The
John Brimelow Report
Could
be time to buy silver
Friday, August 26, 2005
Indian
ex-duty premiums: AM $3.40, PM $2.67, with world gold at $437.75 and
$438.55. Ample, and quite adequate, for legal imports. The world’s
largest bullion importer is a solid buyer at these prices. This is a
problem for the Bears
Perhaps
even more so in silver. Ex-duty premiums in silver this morning were 9c
and 20c, with world silver at $6.84 both times. Adequate and lavish, for
legal imports. If silver trades in the low $6.70s on Monday (as it
appears to be closing in NY), this will intensify. It may be recalled
that when silver briefly traded in the $6.40s in early January, dealers
were flying the metal into India, an event which happens less
than once a decade. MarketVane’s Bullish Consensus for silver was 57%
last night – presumably it will be down again today. The low in
January was 51%. The technical situation is of course absolutely
gruesome – that is of no interest to the Indian consumer. A useful
trade may be developing: IN THE TWO MONTHS AFTER THE JANUARY LOW THIS
YEAR, SILVER ROSE ALMOST 20%.
Japan
was comatose. Volume slumped 47% to only 7,069 Comex equivalent and open
interest was static – down 605 Comex equivalent to equal 97,449 NY
contracts. Mitsubishi’s data implies only a 0.6 tonne (20 Comex)
addition to the "General Public"’s long. The active contract
was down 6 yen, although world gold went out $1.70 above the NY close
– no doubt reflecting buying from further west in Asia as the day wore
on.
On
silver, though, Mitsubishi reports bargain- hunting by the public and
implies the "General Public" added 32.8% to their long – 787
Comex lots.
On
Thursday in NY of course an apparently half hearted attempt on $440 was
promptly suppressed and reversed. In fact, this effort was more serious
than met the eye: on volume of only 28,236 lots open interest soared
4,444 contracts – 13.8 tonnes – to 330,070, almost back to the
recent high. Gold finished up 90c. Apparently a serious buyer met a
serious seller in a quiet, but definitely not a thin market.
On
Friday morning, an effort to drive gold down (including in Euros) around
10 AM NY time was decisively blocked. This kind of action, and India,
bodes ill for the Bears.
JB
CARTEL
CAPITULATION WATCH
The
perfect storm hit the stock market this morning. With it becoming
apparent to everyone that higher oil prices are beginning to affect the
US consumer and economy in a material way, the following hit the tape
simultaneously:
*09:47
Univ of Michigan consumer sentiment index 89.1 in August vs consensus
92.5
This
is the final reading for August, and was significantly lower than the
preliminary report of 92.7. July was 96.5.
*
* * * *
*10:00
Greenspan says that the Fed is paying closer attention to asset
prices
Greenspan
is speaking at the Jackson Hole Fed conference.
*
* * * *
Housing
boom is an imbalance: Greenspan
JACKSON
HOLE, Wyo. (MarketWatch) -- In his sharpest words to date about rising
home prices, Fed chief Alan Greenspan described the housing boom as an
economic imbalance that could end badly for the economy.
In
prepared remarks to the Jackson Hole Fed policy conference, Greenspan
said high home prices were due in part to low risk premiums demanded by
investors.
Such increases in asset values "are too often viewed by market
participants as structural and permanent."
"History
has not dealt kindly with the aftermath of protracted periods of low
risk premiums." Read
his remarks.
Greenspan warned
asset values could fall if investors grow cautious and demand higher
interest rates. "What they perceive as newly abundant liquidity can
readily disappear," Greenspan said.
"Any
onset of increased investor caution elevates risk premiums and, as a
consequence, lowers asset values and promotes the liquidation of the
debt that supported higher prices," Greenspan said.
Greenspan
said the flexibility of the economy is the most important policy asset
in handling any shocks from a fall in asset values.
He
expressed optimism that the adjustments could be made gradually and a
recession could be avoided.
"If
we can maintain an adequate degree of flexibility, some of America's
economic imbalances, most notably the large current account deficit and
the housing boom, can be rectified by adjustments in prices, interest
rates, and exchange rates rather than through more-wrenching changes in
output, incomes, and employment," Greenspan said.
Protectionism
and the large U.S. fiscal deficit threaten flexibility, he said.
The
Fed chairman, who is scheduled to leave his position by the end of
January, said central bank forecasts and monetary policy are becoming
increasingly driven by changes in asset prices, such as equities, bonds
and real estate.
-END-
Thus,
at the very moment Greenspan is warning of increased investor caution,
the consumer sentiment number of the day drops far more than expected.
Meanwhile, a soaring crude price refused to go down. Well, it refused
until some weather report miraculously surfaced near the end of oil
trading to save the shorts’ bacon. At 2, oil was staring at $68 per
barrel and another all-time close. On the capricious weather news, it
sank like a stone, closing at $66.13, down $1.36 per barrel. Still, this
is very expensive oil.
The
US stock market, weak all session long, moved up on the oil setback and
then faded late. The DOW lost 53 to 10,397. The DOG gave up 14 to 2121,
closing lower for the fourth week in a row.
This
statement by Greenspan today is profoundly disturbing:
"In
prepared remarks to the Jackson Hole Fed policy conference, Greenspan
said high home prices were due in part to low risk premiums demanded by
investors."
As
mentioned earlier, the reason for low risk premiums out there is that
Alan Greenspan and friends rigged the gold price. The average US
investor will soon face a fiasco thanks to policies of Mr. Greenspan and
The Gold Cartel. This has been one of the themes in my speeches over the
last few years.
On
China:
06:45
China C. Bank advisor Yu says big, one-off yuan revaluation
"dangerous", China basket system "transitional" -
Reuters
Headlines
only. Advisor Yu says China forex reserves to grow sharply despiteyuan
revaluation. China to let market forces play a bigger role insetting
yuan exchange rate, according to Yu. Says yuan revaluation helps reduce
China's over-reliance on exports. China's basket regime helps reduce
speculation on yuan, according to an advisor. Yu says China must guard
against economic slowdown, but no nedd to relax monetary policy.
Currencies: euro/dollar $1.2319, +0.0018; dollar/yen Y109.62, (0.43).
*
* * * *
The
continuing margin squeeze on the banks is an extremely important
financial market development. Thus, this story in its entirety (perhaps
yet another reason for the Fed meeting on credit derivatives in
mid-September):
US
banks' margins fall to 15-year low, FDIC says
Thu Aug 25, 2005 04:11 PM ET By Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK, Aug 25 (Reuters)
Perhaps banks should go back to giving away toasters.
Rising
short-term interest rates, and the failure of long-term rates to rise
with them, have caused margins at federally-insured banks and thrifts to
shrink to their lowest level in 15 years, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corp. said on Thursday.
Ten
Federal Reserve interest rate hikes since mid-2004 have forced banks to
pay depositors more, and to pay more on their own borrowings.
But
competition among lenders and a reticence of companies and individuals
to borrow beyond their means keeps lending costs down, amid concerns the
economy might slow, oil prices might spiral higher, and real estate
prices might fall.
Less-than-ideal
rate bets already cut into second-quarter profits at such giants as
Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. and JPMorgan Chase & Co.
"Banks
are trying to push out loans that fewer people may want as the economy
slows, while their favorite user of money, corporations, still have
tremendous amounts of cash on their balance sheets," said James
Cusser, senior portfolio manager at Waddell & Reed Investment
Management Co. "Bigger banks would like to do more commercial
lending, and if there's not enough demand for it, they have to cut their
prices."
The
FDIC said net interest margin, the difference between what banks earn on
loans and pay on deposits, fell to 3.49 percent from 3.53 percent in the
first quarter.
Margins
are now the lowest since the third quarter of 1990, when the U.S.
economy was in recession. Overall second-quarter profit at the 8,868
institutions insured by the FDIC fell 3.3 percent from the first quarter
to $33.1 billion.
Large
institutions are feeling more pain because they rely more on short-term
borrowings for funding, the FDIC said.
Banks
with less than $100 million of assets on average saw margins rise to
4.22 percent from 4.14 percent. But the 114 institutions with more than
$10 billion of assets -- which together hold nearly three-quarters of
all industry assets -- saw it fall to 3.32 percent from 3.41 percent,
the FDIC said.
WORSENING
AHEAD?
For
big banks, the problem could get worse, as the U.S. Treasury yield curve
flattens.
The
yield on two-year notes this week rose to within 0.15 percentage points
of the yield on 10-year notes. That's the narrowest since early 2001,
just before the last recession began. The gap was 1.15 percentage points
at the end of 2004.
Consumer
rates reflect much of this compression.
According
to Bankrate.com, the average yield on one-year bank certificates of
deposit has risen to 3.68 percent from about 2.25 percent a year
earlier.
In
contrast, the average rate on 30-year fixed mortgages actually fell
slightly, to 5.31 percent.
Most
economists expect short-term rates to keep rising, but there is less
consensus about to the degree to which long rates might follow.
Cusser,
for his part, has been adding two-year Treasury notes to the $1.4
billion he helps invest. That note yields about 4 percent.
"You
can get more than 90 percent of the yield on a 30-year bond from an
ultra-safe two-year note," he noted.
-END-
Raymond
comments:
Bill,
A yield curve inversion is on the way, but what is missed in the
financial press is why it is necessary.
With
the problems of negative real-interest rates and rampant inflation,
either an inverted yield curve, a decrease in the money supply or a
combination of both are necessary to cure these negative growth
problems.
Sustained
positive real-economic growth (not fake-economic growth due to
fiat money & credit creation) is impossible under these current
conditions.
However,
this time the yield curve inversion will be 'historic'.
With
the Fed's new intervention paradigm, this inversion will be 'historic'
because for the first time it will occur with long-term interest rates
falling. According to my records, dating back to 1900, inversions have
always occurred with long-term interest rates rising, ... not falling.
In
the past, inversions have been sufficient enough to cure negative growth
problems.
This
attempt to get real-interest rates positive and tame inflation will
severely test the Fed's new intervention paradigm. But with long-term
interest rates falling instead of rising, this inversion will most
likely not be sufficient enough to change conditions.
This
attempt may be successful in the short-term, but in the long run it is
doomed.
By
the end of next summer, according to my analysis of long-term cycles,
the next stage of inflation is expected to begin.
This
next stage is anticipated to be historic in magnitude.
Finally,
the coming yield curve inversion confirms everything that has been
reporting over the past several years, which the mainstream financial
press refuses to acknowledge.
Congratulations
on the successful 'Gold Rush 21'.
All
the best,
Raymond
M. Green
From
Ron Lutka on the coming credit derivatives meeting:
Hi
Bill,
SPECULATION
The
apparent Fed Sept 15 meeting with 14 financial institutions is very
suspect to my mind. My understanding is a senior business executive and
senior risk executive from each firm are asked to attend a meeting to
address something as clerical and mechanical as unmatched trades. Who
are the brain dead managing this part of the business? And the same
problem apparently exists across 14 financial institutions? I would
think phone calls and internal and external auditors could easily clean
that up. If they can't, then which executives authorized personnel to
trade in these non-standardized instruments without putting basic
business controls in place prior to commencement of business? And who is
managing the daily, weekly, monthly reconciliation? And who authorized
the continuation of trades after it was discovered trades were
out-of-control? 14 financial institutions who cannot balance their
books? Something does not line up.
In
my opinion, the meeting as publicly described could be cover for the
true intentions of the meeting which might be different than the
publicly stated intentions. The true intentions might be to give
"friends" notice of an upcoming major potential or real
financial event in person rather than over the internet or phone lines
that can be tapped into and heard by others.
What
could such a possible upcoming major financial event be? A planned stock
market crash? A violent change in Fed interest rates? A sharp decline in
the USD (as Saudi Arabia pulls out assets)? The end of the suppression
of the price of gold (I understand Deutche Bank is invited)? Disclosure
of the seriousness of the problems at fannie mae or General Motors? The
disclosure of serious hedge fund problems? Other? A combination of
these?
The
meeting might be to discuss a risk issue, but I doubt the risk issue is
soley in the form of unmatched trades. And if it is, there are surely
much larger unseen problems lurking beneath the surface in these
financial institutions.
RL
Nicely
put, Ron.
From
George Ure at www.urbansurvival.com:
Stockgate
to Pop?
Some
serious odors are developing around the financial industry's practice of
doing naked puts and calls (as the mood suits them) with stock they
don't own. And now, the Fed is calling a meeting on credit derivatives
and pointing out how extreme the risk is. Some
good reports are surfacing around the edges, but as we see if, the
derivatives bubble,
like it's kin the housing bubble, may be too big now for regulators to
do anything about other than try - as Alan Greedspan is - to manage the
problem so when it pops it will be after his watch is over. That way he
will go into the history books without footnotes like mine that will
point out that he and his cronies are the reason the second leg down of
the Second Depression will be so much greater than the first - it's as
usual a tale of lust and greed - and oh yeah, leverage to extremes.
Also
worth seeing: The John
Embry/Sprott Asset Management interview on gold.
On
silver:
Hi
Bill,
(Almost)
unbelievable what is happening to silver today. Wish I had more spare
fiat paper to get more of this criminally underpriced store of value.
The brazen manipulators are handing the real thing to those wise enough
to take it.
Like
you, I believe the Sept. gathering of the banking vultures is presaging
some event of large magnitude that may already be manifesting, albeit
behind the scenes (the long expected derivative meltdown?). Market
behavior is so constrained and obviously controlled, that when the dam
finally breaks, at that time, it may be too late to position oneself
safely. The flood waters have been held back for too long. Key words -
sudden and drastic. Hopefully, the cabal will not close down markets
altogether, blaming any meltdown on the pretext of some foreknown (or
God forbid a false flag) exogenous, catastrophic event. Time will tell,
but I sense the rats in the kitchen working overtime, cooking up some
evil brew. What they have underestimated is how many of us are onto them
and their wicked machinations.
best,
Tom
K
Rhody:
Hello
Bill:
I
cut this paragraph out of yesterday's Midas. If I am reading this
correctly, it is saying that the LBMA is a physical gold market. This I
do not understand.
"The
dog days of summer, for sure. Same Gold Cartel drill, for sure. Once
again, the cash market took the gold price higher in London: AM Fix
$439.00 PM Fix $438.85. As repeatedly noted by many Café members, as
soon as the physical market pricing is over for the day, the cabal
forces take gold lower on the Comex."
Here's
why:

As
you can see, 16 Moz of gold pass through the LBMA every DAY.
There are 312 business days in a year and that means the total gold
transferred through the London "physical market" would have to
be 16 Moz X 312 = 5 billion ounces, with a "b". If one says
that this trade is a physical gold exchange, then one is saying that all
the gold that has ever been produced passes through the LBMA yearly.
I think this is rather unlikely. As you are well aware, a minimum of 1
billion of this is in the form of jewelry and art objects, and about one
quarter of all the world's gold has ended up in India, where it is never
re-exported. I am not splitting hairs here. I just don't think London is
a physical market. I know this market is not futures, but I have never
been able to determine what form of "gold" trades occur on the
LBMA. Perhaps you can find out. Could this trade be in the form of
churning lease contracts?????
The
situation in silver is even worse. As you can see from the graph, silver
transfers are 100 Moz per day. Times 312 business days yields a total
physical trade of 31 billion ounces per year. Since total world output
is 600 Moz per year, I have difficulty believing this is physical metal
exchange. It gets worse.
There
are only about 400 Moz of BULLION stockpiles in the entire world, tops.
To
make London a "physical" market, the entire world bullion
stockpile would have to churn through London every four (4) days, and
that includes COMEX stockpiles. Every day, 6 to 7 tractor trailers
loaded with silver would have to be moving around in the London
financial district. If you go there, you won't see even one. I know I
have beaten this topic to death already, but I think it would be very
interesting to know what form the LBMA "bullion" trade takes,
because it looks like more paper metal to me, but what kind?
Regards,
Rhody.
Rhody,
All
I said was the gold deals around the world are almost all priced on the
PM Fix. This is why it is important. It is where the large buyers and
sellers congregate to do their business. When The Gold Cartel wants to
hit the price, they often wait until this buying is concluded, thus
making it easier to bring the price down on the Comex.
MIDASAdrian
is back this morning:
Bill,
Bring
on the Clowns!
Just
like in a real bull fight there are always some clowns to distract the
bull when the Matador is down. There are certainly some clowns this
morning in this epic bullfight. The DOW takes a dump, the dollar can’t
wait to tank, the world’s biggest gold producer just this week said
they produced 18% less gold than last year, the biggest gold consumer in
the world is about to enter the peak buying season….. and here come
the Clowns, selling probably their last ozs of gold.
Bring
them on! Let them dump their gold, we’ll take it all. Just like in the
real bull fights they are a distraction, not the real show. Sometimes,
though, the clowns are so stupid and careless they get gored to death! I
have a feeling that August 26th could be very auspicious.
Cheers
Adrian
From
Mark O’Byrne in Ireland:
Hi
Bill,
Congrats
Bill on Gold Rush 21. The message is definitely getting out there .
We
posted all material on Gold Rush 21 on www.gold.ie
and www.goldinvestments.org
and in our weekly newsletter which goes out to many of the major
investment analysts in major institutions in the world and to many
financial journalists in Ireland and the UK.
Posted
Embry's interview which was great. Embry is excellent - articulate and
matter of fact and in our television age, people trust or believe TV to
be more authoritative than the written word.
I
have thought we were on the verge of the big breakout for a while and
have been proved wrong but time is on our side and $500 and then the
next stage of this multi year bull market is nigh.
The
US Property Bubble appears to have already severely burst but while
being reported it is being spun with misleading headlines by the
sections of the media. Check out these stories posted on www.gold.ie
http://www.usatoday.com/news/opinion/editorials/2005-08-24-our-view_x.htmUS
Commerce Department: Median Home Price down from $218K to $204
- Leonhardt, NYT via IHT, 26-08-05
http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/08/25/business/rent.php
Commerce
Department Reports US Median House Prices down 7.2% in July
- Fox News
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,166619,00.html
Dot.com
bust echoes in nation's housing boom -
USA Today, 26-08-05
Is
The Housing Market About to Bubble Over?
- Buckner, Fox News, 26-08-05
The
Beginning to the End of the Housing Market? -
Sjuggerud, Investment University, 26-08-05
http://www.investmentu.com/IUEL/2005/20050825.html
Sjugerrud sums it up and he has a frightening US property chart.
Well done again on Gold Rush 21 Bill,
Mark
On
the markets:
I've
been suspecting all week, given the overnite rallies in gold in the
access market, and the blatant smack of gold using paper the instant
that comex opens, that perhaps the character of the spec long in the COT
report might be a bit different this time. Moreover, when they decided
to attack silver the last few days after several days of trying to force
gold down and failing, I figured the cabal was hoping to create a
collateral sell-off effect in gold. It did not happen. The tick by tick
trading action today in gold smells completely of someone out there
trying to knock down gold and then covering shorts. I doubt this is your
commercial signal failure, but I believe that the cartel has failed to
use the obviously artificially contrived COT structure (thank you trader
Dan for your brilliant COT articles) to flush out a large percentage of
the large spec longs. Also, for what it's worth, I've finally discovered
the CBOT silver contract. It suffers immensely from liquidity, but it
trades electronically and only requires a $1620 entry margin. I'm now
using it for my "core" silver contract holdings. Thanks for
all you do Bill.
Dave in Denver
It
didn’t take long for this new Aussie Café member to catch on. What is
taking the dopes in the mainstream gold world so long to "get
it?"
Hello
Bill,
Something stinks about the moves in gold and silver over the last few
days.
Despite
oil hitting US$68, a weakening US dollar and a raft of horrible economic
reports, 24 hour gold was unable to stay past US$440. It should have
been soaring.
But
every time gold went up a few dollars it immediately was met by heavy
selling.
In
a very bullish scenario for gold, this did not look like normal market
action to me.
To
me it looked like US$440 was being desperately defended, despite the
fundamentals, and despite the buying demand, in an attempt to prevent an
assault on US$450 and then higher prices.
I
reckon you can bet your last dollar if it was just as easy to manipulate
the oil futures market we’d have oil trading well under US$40 right
now.
On
bullish news for oil, oil effortlessly rises 1%, 2% and at times even
more.
It
doesn’t like gold have a huge battle to increase 1%, often being sold
off on the same day after not even initially moving up 1%.
Something
stinks.
What
is happening now is so blatant. It doesn’t even appear to be hidden
anymore. There are white collar crooks out there who think they have the
right to decide what the "free" market price for gold is.
They
should be prosecuted, fined and thrown into jail.
Best
wishes,
Neil Davis
Thank
you ,Peter Spina of www.Goldseek.com,
for posting:
How
do we know central banks rig the gold market and what can we do about
it?
by: Chris Powell, Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
Remarks by Chris Powell, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
at Gold Rush 21, Dawson City, Yukon Territory, Canada
For
those who have not read the commentary by my special colleague, please
go to:
http://news.goldseek.com/GATA/1124990882.php
One
of my favorite people in the gold world is Adam Fleming, former Harmony
Gold chairman, and now chairman of Wits Gold in South Africa.
I
will never forget the day when Reg Howe and I were at the FT Gold
Conference in 2000. There was a lull in the speaker flow. Right before
the GFMS person was about to present, Adam stood up during the break and
turned to Reg and I, saying: "GO GATA." Adam has been a GATA
supporter from the get-go.
Adam,
who took time from his summer vacation to come to Dawson City, was one
of the speakers at GR 21 and gave a splendid presentation. He touched on
Wits and why it is worth a serious investor look. Here are some bullet
points from Adam's Dawson City speech:

Got
my attention, as I am already a shareholder, and will be participating
in their coming IPO. Adam tells me they "hope to have an IPO in
Johannesburg with a possibility of a secondary listing on the TSE in the
first quarter of 2006." Their website is www.witsgold.com
so people can keep in touch with their progress towards that listing.
Anyone interested in participating in the offering should contact Wits
through that medium.
I
love how Michel Roy, CEO of ECU and another participant at GR 21,
communicates with his shareholders:
Dear
Shareholders,
The
official numbers for the last Quarter show the significant progression
made in recent months. We intend to maintain this growth curve for the
rest of the year with extra production scheduled to come on stream in
early September and pyrite concentrates to be produced on a regular
basis in the fourth Quarter.
None
of the other targets has been forgotten as shown by the data on
densities which will result in a significant increase in resources at no
cost. Also we are progressing in the drift to reach the San Mateo mine
on the sixth level and have encountered several veins which will be
evaluated over the next few weeks.
If
some people still doubt that we are a real producer, one has to only
consider the revenues for the Second Quarter versus operating costs for
the same period, keeping in mind that ONLY June was a normal month, May
was about ¾ capacity while April was at 50% at the most to realize that
real progress is being achieved on a month to month basis on the
operations side. Since the end of June, we did another round of
modifications and adjustments in July and WE ARE already reaping the
rewards in August. As for September, a brilliant idea from our mining
department will be implemented to raise the production level by 20%.
This undertaking will only require one week to implement (7 weeks less
then we originally thought) at a fraction of the initial planned cost
(75% less then we originally thought). Needless to say, we are excited
at the prospects these modifications will contribute to our bottom line
for the full Q4 of this year.
Thank
you for your continued support and we will continue to put our best
efforts forward to create shareholder value.
Truly
yours,
Michel
Chuck
checks in:
Bill:
This
is the only word that comes popping in my little head. The action of the
past couple of weeks is too bizarre. We have had the golds opening
higher each day and then selling off. The same with the stock market. We
have now had a sharp drop in silver even though there is an obvious
squeeze in copper and oil. The bond rates have dropped sharply in spite
of these squeezes.
Obviously,
something very strange and peculiar is afoot and it is not good. It
appears as though the financial stocks could cave in here at any moment.
We might limp through next week until the holiday but I wouldn't bet on
it. Scary! Chuck
I
think it’s scary too Chuck, and it’s how I picked the theme of
today’s MIDAS. The financial landscape of US markets is likely to
change radically in the months to come.
The
gold shares were lower with the XAU finishing at 93.87, down .29. The
HUI close was incorrect – not sure what the right number was.
Based
on the emails I have been receiving, veteran Café members gold/silver
shareholders are becoming very anxious over their gold/silver company
investments. The fatigue factor of nearly a two-year bear market is
beginning to take its toll.
Those
feelings are only natural. Hang in there. Gold, silver and the shares
remain THE historic investment opportunity of a lifetime. We have years
and years of good times ahead of us.
GATA
BE IN IT TO WIN IT!
MIDAS

© 2005 Bill Murphy
Bio and Archives
Appendix
Mint
Confiscates Double Eagle Gold Coins
from
Dealer Seeking View on Authenticity
By The Associated Press
via
Newsday, Garden City, L.I., New York
Thursday,
August 25, 2005
PHILADELPHIA
-- The U.S. Mint seized 10 Double Eagle gold coins from 1933, among the
rarest and most valuable coins in the world, that a jeweler says she
turned in to determine their authenticity.
Joan
S. Langbord plans a federal court lawsuit to try to recover them, her
attorney, Barry H. Berke, said Wednesday. Langbord found the coins among
the possessions of her late father, longtime jeweler Israel Switt, who
had acknowledged selling some of the coins decades ago. She now operates
her father's business.
David
Lebryk, acting director of the Mint, had announced in a news release
that the rare coins, which were never put in circulation, had been taken
from the Mint "in an unlawful manner" in the mid-1930s and now
were "recovered."
The
coins, which are so rare that their value is almost beyond calculation,
are public property, he said.
Berke
said Mint officials couldn't prove the coins had been stolen, or were
subject to forfeiture. But Mint officials said Thursday the double
eagles could not have legally been taken from the Mint.
In
2002, Sotheby's and numismatic firm Stack's auctioned off a 1933 Double
Eagle coin for $7.59 million, the highest price ever paid for a coin.
That Double Eagle, believed to have been part of a collection belonging
to King Farouk of Egypt, surfaced when a coin dealer tried selling it to
undercover Secret Service agents.
After
a legal battle, the dealer was permitted to sell the coin at auction on
the condition he split the proceeds with the Mint. One of the terms of
the settlement was that it would set no precedent for any future double
eagle that appeared.
In
its statement, the Mint said officials were still deciding what they
would do with the seized coins, which are being held at Fort Knox. They
said they had no plans to auction them but would consider saving
"these historical artifacts" for public exhibits. Other double
eagle coins seized in the past were melted down.
Double
Eagles were first minted in 1850 with a face value of $20. The 445,500
coins minted in 1933 were never put into circulation because the nation
went off the gold standard. All the coins were ordered melted down, but
a handful are believed to have survived, including two handed over to
the Smithsonian Institution.
Langbord
declined to discuss how the coins might have wound up with her father,
who operated an antiques and jewelry shop for 70 years and died in 1990
at 95.
The
Mint contends Switt obtained a cache of the gold coins from his
connections at the Mint just before they were to be reduced to bullion
in 1937.
Switt
admitted in 1944 that he had sold nine Double Eagle coins, but he was
not charged in connection with those transactions, according to the
Mint.
The
family attorney said the coins were found recently, and Langbord and her
son, Roy, notified the Mint of the discovery in September. Mint
officials asked to authenticate the coins, then confiscated them after
doing so, Berke said.
He
contended Langbord and her son never relinquished their right to the
coins.
But
Mint officials said Thursday that Berke was told from the beginning that
the coins would not be returned because they were the government's
property.
-END-
From
www.financialsense.com:
IRANIAN
OIL BOURSE COULD KILL THE US DOLLAR
by
Toni Straka, August 23, 2005
Article
Link
|