The long-side speculators who trade paper based claims to gold, silver and other precious metals (futures contracts) are, generally speaking, get-rich-quick schemers. They are the managers of independent hedge funds. They vie for control over the futures markets with institutions that include some of the largest banks in the world and the hedge funds that are owned or operated by current or former executives of those banks. Both long side and short side speculators at futures exchanges, like COMEX in New York, operate at extraordinarily high levels of leverage. The long side speculators are pure gamblers, as they have no influence over central bank policy. In contrast, their opponents take no gambles at all. They are the big international banks that control the world's major central banks and finance ministries.
In spite of repeated complaints, the players in "paper gold" market still set precious metals prices. When I speak of "paper gold" I include silver and platinum, because both of those metals are also traded in the form of futures contracts and futures markets also set their prices. The same dynamic is at work, and a large number of gold traders take heavy cross positions in the two other metals. Although there is not a 100% correlation between the metals, cross positioning generally means that when gold goes up, silver and platinum go up also, regardless of the state of the physical market. Indeed, physical market surpluses and/or shortages end up having little to do with precious metals pricing, at least in the short to medium term.
On October 4, 2016, for no apparent economic reason, the paper gold market was suddenly flooded with fictitious yellow metal. This was likely done by the bullion bank divisions and controlled hedge funds connected to those same international banking firms I mentioned earlier. As noted, the "gold" used for this take down is a work of fiction, as it is with all such take downs. It doesn't exist in the real world. It is purely in the form of paper futures contracts which promise potential delivery of the yellow metal. Exactly how much short selling was required to dislodge long speculators from their positions may never be known, but according to Andrew McGuire, the short sellers managed to "rinse" 1,000 tons of worth of paper gold long positions out of the market.
Those who issue such contracts and the governments that back them know that no more than about % of the speculators who purchase gold for "future delivery" will ever actually collect the physical gold. The rest are just heavily leveraged get-rich-quick schemers. Gold dropped like a stone down $42.80 an ounce, or -3.26%. Similarly, silver was down even more in percentage terms, by $1.01 per ounce, or -5.38%, while platinum dropped by $21 or 2.09%.
By now, some of you may be asking why the bullion bankers can't force gold down to, let's say, $800 an ounce or even a lot less? After all, if they can accomplish so much why not go the rest of the way? The US gold reserve is probably somewhat depleted by now, but it once stood at over 8,100 tons of gold, and probably several thousand tons still remain. The answer is simple. They could push gold down to whatever price they want.
They could set prices at $200 per ounce if they wanted to. Or, even less. But, it would last for only a fleeting moment in history. Perhaps, a day or so. Not more. The problem is that setting such a price would trigger an avalanche of physical buying from purchasers all over the world. The end result: the US Treasury would be on the hook to supply thousands of tons of gold within a few weeks. It would exhaust all its reserves within a few months. The result would be that the system bankers have concocted to manage the price of gold would be proven to be a fraud. Massive failures to deliver would multiply though the marketplace. The credibility of the prices set at futures markets would be destroyed forever.
http://averybgoodman.com/myblog/2016/10/05/why-gold-prices-dropped-so-dramatically-yesterday/
JulieW said:
JulieW said:Read on:
In spite of repeated complaints, the players in "paper gold" market still set precious metals prices. ......... Indeed, physical market surpluses and/or shortages end up having little to do with precious metals pricing, at least in the short to medium term.
On October 4, 2016, for no apparent economic reason, the paper gold market was suddenly flooded with fictitious yellow metal. ....... As noted, the "gold" used for this take down is a work of fiction, as it is with all such take downs. It doesn't exist in the real world. It is purely in the form of paper futures contracts which promise potential delivery of the yellow metal. Exactly how much short selling was required to dislodge long speculators from their positions may never be known, but according to Andrew McGuire, the short sellers managed to "rinse" 1,000 tons of worth of paper gold long positions out of the market.
By now, some of you may be asking why the bullion bankers can't force gold down to, let's say, $800 an ounce or even a lot less? After all, if they can accomplish so much why not go the rest of the way? ..... The problem is that setting such a price would trigger an avalanche of physical buying from purchasers all over the world. The end result: the US Treasury would be on the hook to supply thousands of tons of gold within a few weeks. It would exhaust all its reserves within a few months. ..... Massive failures to deliver would multiply though the marketplace.
Yes, that is exactly what he was saying.Abossy said:I think what he is saying is if the price was that low, there would be a rush to redeem for physical.
Paper price is physical price. To try and discriminate between the two is a fools game... they are joined at the hip by arbitrage.Abossy said:It's all irrelevant anyway. It's out of our control and the only thing we trade on right now is the paper price and right now that price has taken a big hit.
Ipv6Ready said:Think about it.... if paper price and physical price was different by 10% in one way or another, what would you do?
wrcmad said:Paper price is physical price.
trew said:Ipv6Ready said:Think about it.... if paper price and physical price was different by 10% in one way or another, what would you do?
Where is this 'physical price' you talk about ? Where would I get access to this 'physical market' that has it's own price ?
wrcmad said:Paper price is physical price.
Yes there is only the paper price because the only commodities markets are futures markets.
Given the number of threads already covering it, do we really have to revisit the manufacturing premium again? :|JulieW said:trew said:Ipv6Ready said:Think about it.... if paper price and physical price was different by 10% in one way or another, what would you do?
Where is this 'physical price' you talk about ? Where would I get access to this 'physical market' that has it's own price ?
wrcmad said:Paper price is physical price.
Yes there is only the paper price because the only commodities markets are futures markets.
W Davis Buy and sell just now.
Spot at AUD 1656.92
1 Sovereign $399 $430
1/2 Sovereign $199 $215
200 Dollar Coin $500 $537
1 Oz Nugget $1,685 $1,728
1/2 Oz Nugget $842 $870
1/4 Oz Nugget $421 $440
1/10 Oz Nugget $168 $183
1/20 Oz Nugget $84 $92
4 Coin Nugget Set $3,118 $3,219
5 Coin Nugget Set $3,203 $3,306
wrcmad said:Yes, that is exactly what he was saying.Abossy said:I think what he is saying is if the price was that low, there would be a rush to redeem for physical.
Paper price is physical price. To try and discriminate between the two is a fools game... they are joined at the hip by arbitrage.Abossy said:It's all irrelevant anyway. It's out of our control and the only thing we trade on right now is the paper price and right now that price has taken a big hit.
JulieW said:trew said:Ipv6Ready said:Think about it.... if paper price and physical price was different by 10% in one way or another, what would you do?
Where is this 'physical price' you talk about ? Where would I get access to this 'physical market' that has it's own price ?
wrcmad said:Paper price is physical price.
Yes there is only the paper price because the only commodities markets are futures markets.
W Davis Buy and sell just now.
Spot at AUD 1656.92
1 Sovereign $399 $430
1/2 Sovereign $199 $215
200 Dollar Coin $500 $537
1 Oz Nugget $1,685 $1,728
1/2 Oz Nugget $842 $870
1/4 Oz Nugget $421 $440
1/10 Oz Nugget $168 $183
1/20 Oz Nugget $84 $92
4 Coin Nugget Set $3,118 $3,219
5 Coin Nugget Set $3,203 $3,306
JulieW said:W Davis Buy and sell just now.
Spot at AUD 1656.92