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“A
promise is a debt; it is nothing else; and the attempt to make debt
serve
the purpose of money always has been and always will be a failure.
Money and debt are as opposite in nature as fire and water;
money extinguishes debt as water extinguishes fire.” [1]
Abstract
Market
intervention is not new – it has been with us since ancient times that
witnessed the birth of the first marketplace. Once men came together to
trade – markets were born. It did not take long for those who always
try to find a way around – to find a way around.
With
the advent of indirect exchange – gold and silver coin circulated as
money. Soon Kings and Queens became greedy, ordering the masters of the
mint to debase the coin of the realm, in both regards to weight and
purity.
Market
intervention blossomed alongside of man’s greed – as that is all it
is – a means to an end: the desire for more by the appearance of less.
Man has yet to learn the lesson that to try to obtain more for less goes
against natural law. The greater the effort – the greater is the
reward. The less the effort – the less is the reward.
Historical
Record
Throughout
history, there have been numerous attempts to intervene and control
various markets. From taking a small piece of the action – to going
for the big score – to settling back and collecting a steady piece of
the pie on every transaction.
“An
important factor in the commerce of Athens is the money-changer.
There is no one fixed standard, which has very wide acceptance,
but Corinth has another standard, and a great deal of business is also
transacted in Persian gold darics.
The
result is that at the Peireus and near the Agora are a number of little
"tables" where alert individuals, with strong boxes beside
them, are ready to sell foreign coins to would-be travelers, or
exchange darics for Attic drachma, against a favorable commission.” [2]
The
moneychangers – busy plying their trade that transfers this to that
– with some left over for their part. Such was the beginning of
banking in Athens – based upon the exchange of different monies.
From such a meager beginning came forth masters of credit and capital.
The House of Pasion and The House of Nicanor were among the first.
“A
Large Banking Establishment. Enter now the "tables” of
Nicanor. The owner is a metic; perhaps he claims to come from Rhodes,
but the shrewd cast of his eyes and the dark hue of his skin gives a
suggestion of the Syrian about him. In his open office a dozen young
half-naked clerks are seated on low chairs--each with his tablet spread
out upon his knees laboriously computing long sums. The proprietor
himself acts as the cashier. He has not neglected the exchange of
foreign moneys; but that is a mere incidental.
His
first visitor this morning presents a kind of letter of credit from a
correspondent in Syracuse calling for one hundred drachmas. "Your
voucher?" asks Nicanor. The stranger produces the half of a coin
broken in two across the middle. The proprietor draws a similar half
coin from a chest. The parts match exactly, and the
money is paid on the spot.
The
next comer is an old acquaintance, a man of wealth and reputation; he is
followed by two slaves bearing a heavy talent of coined silver, which he
wishes the banker to place for him on an advantageous loan, against
a due commission.
The
third visitor is a well-born but fast and idle young man who is
squandering his patrimony on flute girls and chariot horses. He wishes
an advance of ten mine, and it is given him--against the mortgage of
a house, at the ruinous interest of 36 per cent, for such
prodigals are perfectly fair play.
Another
visitor is a careful and competent ship merchant who is fitting for a
voyage to Crete, and who requires a loan to buy his return cargo.
Ordinary interest, well secured, is 18 per cent, but a sea voyage, even
at the calmest season, is counted extra hazardous. The skipper
must pay 24 per cent at least.
A
poor tradesman also appears to raise a trifle by pawning two silver
cups; and an unlucky farmer, who cannot meet his loan, persuades the
banker to extend the time "just until the next moon” of course at
an unmerciful compounding of interest.” [3]
Disadvantage
Such
have been the ways of the moneychangers, since the dawn of man –
taking advantage of the disadvantage of others. Some call it business,
some call it trade; some call it usury, and some call it intervention
– of the natural inalienable rights of man.
It
has been with us, as long as we – have been with it. There is always a
choice. Perhaps it is better “to never a borrower nor a lender be”,
as one never knows when the tables will turn – but turn they must:
“Many
a table has been closed very suddenly, when its owner absconded, or
collapsed in bankruptcy, and the unlucky depositors and creditors have
been left penniless, during the rearrangement of the tables, as
the euphemism goes.” [4]
History
is replete with examples of the intervention by man to manipulate the
markets to make a killing: The Tulip Mania in Holland in the 1600’s,
the British South Sea Bubble in the 1700s.
Then
there is John Law’s infamous Banque
Générale and the Mississippi Company, which he used to issue stock in
the Compagnie d'Occident, which he then used as the cause to change the
Banque Generale into the Banque Royale, which meant that the King of
France guaranteed the notes of the Bank. Smart guy –
would a made a great bookie or central banker.
Eventually
Law had one company swallow up another until he ended up with the
Compagnie Perpetuelle des Indes in 1719. In 1720 Law was appointed
Controller General of Finance.
One
year later in 1721 the value of the stock of the Compagnie Perpetuelle
des Indes had lost 97% of its value – causing an economic crisis in
France and in Europe in general. So much for intervening and
manipulating the market. Law was demoted from his Controller General
title and position. John boy was actually lucky to make it out of France
alive.
We
have written previously on the early American episodes attempting to
manipulate finance, see Gold
Wars: Intervention and Manipulation.
More
Recent History
More
recently, we have the London Gold Pool and the reputed present day
manipulation of the gold market by the Federal Reserve in collusion with
other central banks, as well as the Bank for International Settlements,
The International Monetary Fund, The World Bank, The United Nations, and
the World Trade Organization to name a few of the New World Order Gang.
We have written on this previously in Gold
Wars: Gibson's Paradox & the Gold Standard.
We
must not forget Mr. Soros – and his generosity for his fellow man when
he provided help to re-adjust the British Pound to its proper value
according to his determinations. A kinder, gentler and nobler gentleman
would be most difficult to emulate.
Exchange
Stabilization Fund
In Gold
Wars: Gibson's Paradox and the Gold Standard we
read J. Virgil Mattingly’s 1995 statement to the FOMC:
“It's
pretty clear that these ESF (exchange stabilizing fund) operations are
authorized. I don't think there is a legal problem in terms of the
authority. The statute [31 U.S.C. s. 5302] is very broadly worded in
terms of words like 'credit' -- it has covered things like the gold
swaps -- and it confers broad authority.”
US
TREASURY EXCHANGE STABILIZATION FUND
Introduction
“The
Exchange Stabilization Fund (ESF) consists of three types of assets:
U.S. dollars, foreign currencies, and Special Drawing Rights (SDR’s)
Currently, the ESF has approximately $38 billion in these three assets.
The
ESF can be used to purchase or sell foreign currencies, to hold U.S.
foreign exchange and Special Drawing Rights (SDR) assets, and to provide
financing to foreign governments. All operations of the ESF require the
explicit authorization of the Secretary of the Treasury (the Secretary).
The
Secretary is responsible for the formulation and implementation of U.S.
international monetary and financial policy, including exchange market
intervention policy. The ESF helps the Secretary to carry out these
responsibilities. By law, the Secretary has considerable discretion in
the use of ESF resources.
The
legal basis of the ESF is the Gold Reserve Act of 1934. As amended in
the late 1970s, the Act provides in part that "the Department of
the Treasury has a stabilization fund …Consistent with the obligations
of the Government in the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on orderly
exchange arrangements and an orderly system of exchange rates, the
Secretary, with the approval of the President, may
deal in gold, foreign exchange, and other instruments of credit and
securities." [5]
A
Pattern of Behavior
It
is quite apparent that man has always tried to intervene in the markets,
to direct and to manipulate in search of profit – the ever-fleeting
temptress who teases with her daunting reflection – to both excite and
to extinguish – at the same time.
And
now we have the wizards and magicians of finance who conjure up the
strangest of brews: derivative debt instruments that bet upon they know
not what – as long as chance is offered – for the sake of chance and
nothing more.
It
is in the chase the perceived value lies – never satiated – never
fulfilled. A sentence more terrible then even Sisyphus knows.
The
greatest magicians have tried and tried – and yet failed to control
the markets. They have indeed accumulated great wealth, however, their
insatiable greed has been and will be their demise – the never ending
pursuit to obtain more, which puts at risk that which they have already
obtained.
The
Land of Make Believe Wealth
Nothing
exemplifies this better than the Bank for International Settlements most
recent publication of the values of existing derivative contracts.
Presently the total stands at $284 TRILLION as denominated in
U.S. Dollars or Federal Reserve Notes.
Outstanding
Over-The Counter Derivatives
(In billions of US dollars)

If
that is not enough to make your stomach queasy, there is the following
that should do the trick. Pay close attention to not only the notional
dollar amounts, but also the time in which they occurred: the
first quarter or 3 months of 2006.
That
means the yearly totals, if they continue at the same pace – would
be 4 times the total numbers indicated. That is a significant
amount of money – even for paper fiat debt-money.
“The pace of
trading on the international derivatives exchanges quickened in the
first quarter of 2006. Combined turnover measured in notional amounts of
interest rate, equity index and currency contracts increased by one
quarter to $429 trillion between January and March 2006 (Graph
4.1) The year-on-year rate of growth rose to 28%, after 23% in the
previous quarter, which indicates that the expansion in activity went
considerably beyond the seasonal acceleration usually recorded in the
first quarter.”
“The
increase in turnover was particularly strong in interest rate products
(26%), as changing perceptions about the future course of monetary
policy in the United States and Japan lifted activity in money market
contracts in the dollar and yen.”
“Uncertainty
about Federal Reserve rate setting contributed to a 38% surge in trading
in derivatives on short-term US interest rates. Turnover in futures and
options on 30-day federal funds, which permit a more precise positioning
on the timing of Fed decisions than the more heavily traded three-month
eurodollar contracts, doubled to $36 trillion in the first quarter.
Open
interest in these contracts rose from $7 trillion at the end of 2005 to
almost $12 trillion three months later. By contrast, trading volumes and
open interest in derivatives on three-month eurodollar deposits went up
by only one third to $166 trillion and $35 trillion respectively.
The
end of the policy of quantitative easing by the Bank of Japan and the
prospect of the first rise in interest rates since 2001 led to a sharp
increase in activity in money market contracts denominated in yen in
February and March.” [6]
Turnover
of Exchange-Traded Futures and Options

Keeping
It In Perspective
Kind
of brings a new perspective to the word perspective, which if it sounds
a bid odd – it should. As the saying goes: “those whom the gods wish
to destroy, they first make mad.”
Comic
books do not have stuff as bizarre as this in them. Truth is indeed
stranger than fiction, especially in the 21st Century New
World Order. I mean just how much is $429 trillion dollars – are there
that many grains of sand passing through the hour glass?
The
inordinate amount of such sums indicates how valueless a dollar has
become.
It is
a tragedy unparalleled in history that will ultimately cause more
suffering than any single war has. Its vibration will resonate across
the ethers – requiring a balancing of huge proportions.
Obviously
from all of the above there can be no doubt that intervention within the
markets has and does take place – and to obscene degrees. Dante may
have to come up with another circle to house the usurpers of such
perverted extremes. Man doth know no bounds – yet.
What
Remedy
The
question before us is – what do we do with the information? Knowledge
is power – IF it is used to accomplish something positive, otherwise
it is worth nothing. It is not in the knowing – it is in the doing.
So
we must do something – take action of some kind. The choices are
several. First, there is the spreading of the information so that others
become aware: the spreading of the word.
Next,
there is the use of the information to try to implement change, which is
a monumental task – which is ever more reason to take it on. It is all
grist for the mill. There is nothing that cannot be accomplished –
nothing. Whatever thought gives rise to – can be accomplish and acted
upon, as all is but a thought made manifest.
Third,
the knowledge should play a part in all investor’s investment
decisions. Presently most investors use technical analysis and or
fundamental analysis. In today’s New World Order, interventional
analysis is mandatory.
When
properly coupled with a contrarian understanding of how markets work, it
provides a powerful tool along with technical and fundamental analysis.
However, they all have their place; and they all have their limitations.
To underestimate or overestimate either – is pure folly.
Parameters
To be
aware that large entities intervene within the markets and have a
significant affect is one thing – to be able to make precise
predictions on subsequent market action is another.
If
these elite moneyed interests have the capabilities of the latest
cutting edge technology (which they do), as well as pockets deeper then
deep to pay for it all – they are without doubt a most formidable
opponent.
This
does not mean that they cannot be beat. It does, however, suggest that
it may be best to let them beat themselves. The proverbial “give them
a long enough rope with which to hang themselves” comes to mind.
Buyers
and Sellers
We
want to make note of what we consider a very important and most relevant
issue at hand: for every buyer there is a seller – for every seller
than is a buyer. This distinction carries much weight when extrapolated
to the farthest reaches regarding the issue of manipulation and
intervention.
Whenever
a market manipulator intervenes within the market – they either buy or
sell or both. It is even possible to have a net neutral position,
although on the scale we are considering, such would be quite an
accomplishment.
If
they sell – someone must be on the other side of the trade. Likewise,
if they buy, someone must be on the other side of the trade.
With
futures and options and other derivatives of structured finance – the
buying and selling on either side of the trade may not occur
immediately, or simultaneously, nevertheless it must occur or the
markets will seize up, which we hasten to add is always a distinct
possibility.
Alf
Fields put it very nicely the other day in his article Gold Update VII:
“At the outset let me say
that I believe that GATA has done a good job in fingering the points of
manipulation in the gold market, although I prefer to use the word
distortion. The main areas where interference with normal market
patterns has taken place are:
-
Excessive short selling in futures markets either to
extend a decline or prevent a rapid upward price thrust;
-
Selling of physical gold by Central Banks;
-
Leasing of physical gold to facilitate hedging or carry
trade activities.
It should be
noted in points 1 and 3 that for every downward price distortion caused
by excessive short selling there should also be a countervailing upward
price distortion when the trade is unwound. In the case of excessive
selling of futures, these short positions will have to be closed
eventually by corresponding subsequent purchases.
Hedging and
carry trade activities are unwound by buying back what was sold or by
delivering newly mined gold back to the Central Bank that supplied the
leased gold, thus reducing physical sales to the market.
Selling of
gold by Central Banks has had the purpose of limiting the gold price
rise. A sharply rising gold price would attract attention to the rapidly
declining purchasing power of the irredeemable currencies that all
countries now issue.
This
artificial lid on the gold price will in due course (already happening)
attract the attention of countries accumulating large surpluses, mainly
of US dollars, resulting in purchases of gold for reserve purposes.
In other
words, all these distortions tend to be of relatively short term
duration, and are followed by countervailing upward distortions. The
underlying primary trend of the market will always flow through to be
expressed in the major waves while the distortions will tend to be
apparent in the minor waves.” [7]
In
other words, whatever extent the market is manipulated by or intervened
within, over the intermediate term it tends to smooth itself out as
water seeks its own level.
Point
Of No Return
Granted,
there can be some immediate distortions and imbalances, but over the
long term, they will balance out – unless the market experiences a
10-sigma event greater than three standard deviations from existing
computerized black box trading programs.
The
mantra of the day would then be: Houston –
we have a problem – copy. It
would play out like a global game of dominos – a ring around the rosy
of sorts, especially the part about “ashes, ashes, and they all fell
down.” This lovely nursery rhyme is about the plague.
Such
an event comes closer to reality every day, as the mal-investments and
stress in the system increases. Eventually the bifurcation point will be
breached, and chaos theory will take over – with an example not soon
to be forgotten – that markets are non-linear in form and function.
When
faced with a herd of rogue elephants rushing at you it is best to get
out the way. To try to take them on face to face is utter folly.
However,
if one has planned their strategy out well in advance, and has just
behind them a cliff or large pit unknown to the elephants – their wild
charge will be their own undoing – they will destroy themselves. All
you have to do is get out of the way and watch.
A
wise saying in Judo is: let your opponent make the first move that
starts his downfall. When facing the rogue interventionists in today’s
market – such wisdom is well advised.
Laws
of the Market
Another
point for consideration is to realize that although the opponent is
strong and formidable – they do not, and cannot, completely control
the markets.
They
can and do direct them, and sometimes to large degrees – but no one or
no one entity can completely control the market; for the market is the
sum total of all players, and is consequently, larger than any
individual player or group of players.
The
market is a law unto itself and it will not be denied. The longer and
harder that the primary trend of the market is manipulated by
intervention, the larger and more powerful will the adjustment be when
the market returns to its mean.
Just
as a pendulum swings to and fro on either side of balance – the degree
of opposition on either side are equal – forever seeking balance.
The
best course of action is to take what the market offers. Do not fight
the market. Accept whatever it offers. If one is aware that the trend is
being manipulated in any one direction, let the rogues elephants run to
they wear themselves out.
Then
take the opposite position when the market has reached an extreme level.
The risk to reward ratio will be quite favorable at such time. If one
scales into their positions there is even less risk. In a bull market,
one sells into strength and buys on weakness. In a bear market, one buys
on strength and sells into weakness.
Buy
or Sell
We
have done exactly that in the recent top and retreat therefrom. When
gold went over $700 I started selling as everybody was yelling. Once
gold went down far enough and everybody was crying – I started
buying.
So
far – so good, as this is but a short-term play, unless it decides to
run – and if it wants to, I will oblige and give it more slack. To
have a contrarian point of view is mandatory in today’s manipulated
markets. Let them sell – then you buy. Let them buy – you sell to
them.
Bond
yields have been going up – not down. They have broken above
significant resistance of a long-term nature. Perhaps it is a ploy –
perhaps a misreading of the tealeaves. Time will tell.
In
my opinion the opponent is strong – but he shows his weakness by
relying on $284 TRILLION DOLLARS of make believe money-values in make
believe derivatives – derived therefrom.
He
adds to his weakness by employing them repeatedly, turning them over to
the tune of $429 TRILLION every three months.
I
was going to state the yearly total but my calculator does not go that
high. I am not even sure what comes after a trillion – perhaps God
only knows and he is not telling – yet. I am not sure I even want to
know.
Weak
Links
A
chain is only as strong as its weakest link: 284 trillion are a lot of
links. When one of them breaks it will be because the bifurcation point
has been breached, and once that occurs, chaos theory takes over and
there is no coming back – it’s straight on till morning – just
follow the fairy.
There
is no stopping it – it is a run away vibration whose exponential
amplitude must play itself out. Such events throughout history have
taken down huge bridges and buildings by a single vibration run amuck.
So
yes it is true that the opponent is strong, and yes he can conduct large
and powerful operations to direct the markets – but outright control:
no – it would run against not only natural law but cosmic law –
against Destiny. Even the gods pay heed to Destiny – as they are
Destiny’s Child.
OCEANIDS:
Who then is the steersman of Necessity?
Prometheus: The
three-shaped MOERAE and mindful ERINYES.
OCEANIDS: Can
it be that Zeus has less power than they do?
Prometheus: Yes,
in that even he cannot escape what is foretold. [8]
[2]
Title: A Day In
Old Athens Author: William Stearns Davis
[3]
Same
[4]
Same
[5]
Exchange Stabilization Fund
[6]
BIS Quarterly Review, June 2006 12 June 2006
[7]
Elliott Wave Gold Update VII – Field
[8]
Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound 515

© 2006 Douglas V. Gnazzo
Editorial Archive
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CONTACT
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Douglas V. Gnazzo
Honest Money Gold & Silver Report, LLC
Canton Center, CT USA
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About
the author: Douglas V.
Gnazzo is CEO of New England Renovation LLC, a historical restoration contractor
that specializes in restoring older buildings that are vintage historic
landmarks. He writes for numerous websites and his work appears both
here and abroad. Just recently he was honored by being chosen as a Foundation
Scholar for the Foundation for the Advancement of Monetary Education
(FAME).
Disclaimer:
The contents of this article represent the opinions of Douglas V.
Gnazzo. Nothing contained herein is intended as investment advice or
recommendations for specific investment decisions, and you should not
rely on it as such. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not a registered investment
advisor. Information and analysis above are derived from sources and
using methods believed to be reliable, but Douglas. V. Gnazzo cannot
accept responsibility for any trading losses you may incur as a result
of your reliance on this analysis and will not be held liable for the
consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein
or any omission. Individuals should consult with their broker and
personal financial advisors before engaging in any trading activities.
Do your own due diligence regarding personal investment decisions. This
article may contain information that is confidential and/or protected by
law. The purpose of this article is intended to be used as an
educational discussion of the issues involved. Douglas V. Gnazzo is not
a lawyer or a legal scholar. Information and analysis derived from the
quoted sources are believed to be reliable and are offered in good
faith. Only a highly trained and certified and registered legal
professional should be regarded as an authority on the issues involved;
and all those seeking such an authoritative opinion should do their own
due diligence and seek out the advice of a legal professional. Lastly
Douglas V. Gnazzo believes that The United States of America is the
greatest country on Earth, but that it can yet become greater. This
article is written to help facilitate that greater becoming. God Bless
America.
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