Precious
Metals Market Manipulation?
by
Doug Casey
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by Doug Casey:
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For many years
now, a meme has been floating around that the prices of gold and
silver are being manipulated, which is to say suppressed, by various
powers of darkness. This is not an unreasonable assertion. After
all, the last thing the monetary powers-that-be want is to see is
the price of gold skyrocketing. That would serve as an alarm bell,
possibly panicking people all over the world, telling them to get
out of the dollar. It's assumed, by those who believe in the theory,
that the US Treasury is behind the suppression scheme, in complicity
with a half-dozen or so large bullion banks that regularly trade
in the metals.
The assertion
is bolstered by the fact that governments in general, and the US
in particular, are always intervening in all kinds of markets. They
try to control the price of wheat and corn with various USDA programs.
They manifestly manipulate the price of credit (interest rates),
now keeping it as low as possible to stave off financial collapse.
And they may well be active, through the so-called Plunge Protection
Team, in propping up the stock market. They were largely responsible
for the boom in property, through numerous programs and parastatals
like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Why, therefore, shouldn't they
also be involved in the monetary metals? Central banks regularly
intervene in (i.e., manipulate) each others' currencies. So it's
not unreasonable to imagine they'd try to manipulate gold as well.
In fact, the
US and other governments did try to suppress the gold price from
1961 to 1968 through what was known as the London Gold Pool. The
US alone persisted in trying to do so until Nixon devalued the dollar
and closed the gold window in 1971.
But if it was
ever doable, that was the time. Although nobody knows exactly how
much gold there is above ground, a reasonable guess might be six
billion ounces. There was a possibility of controlling the price,
in the days of the London Gold Pool, when there were only three
billion ounces in existence and when all the gold in the world was
worth only $105 billion ($35 x 3 billion = $105 billion).
Today, however,
the value of the world's gold is around $10 trillion ($1,650 x 6
billion = $10 trillion), nearly 100 times as much. And governments
own about a billion ounces, only 16% of it, whereas the last time
they tried to control the price they owned about 1.1 billion ounces,
which was about 35% of the world supply. And the governments, their
central banks and almost all large commercial banks are bankrupt;
they have vastly less financial power than they did in the days
of the London Gold Pool. Why would they try to do something that's
so obviously a losing game?
I'm not at
all disinclined to believe tales of manipulation of markets by the
state; I expect it, and as a speculator I relish it. But I like
to see evidence for everything. And extraordinary claims demand
extraordinary evidence. I've read the stuff these guys have written
for years and have seen nothing but strident assertions and accusations.
I'm completely willing to believe central bankers are capable of
any kind of nefarious foolishness, but I'd like to see proof. I'm
constantly reading assertions of how "the boys" come along
at "precisely" 1p.m. or 2 p.m. or perhaps "precisely"
11:37 a.m. or 12:16 p.m. and, on a purely not-for-profit basis,
decide to "smack down" the market for gold or silver or
both. Meanwhile the market has been hitting new highs for a dozen
years.
As you might
imagine, I know most of the believers in the precious metals manipulation
theories personally and am only a phone call or email away from
those I don't know. And I'm curious. So I ask questions of these
folks, who are generally intelligent, well informed and sophisticated.
But I don't get answers that I find make sense. There have been
readily identifiable reasons for other government manipulations
in the past. It's obvious why a government wants low interest rates.
It's obvious why they want high real estate and stock markets. But
why in today's world would they really want to spend
billions keeping gold (or especially silver) down? You'd think they
might have tried to control the price of uranium when it ran to
$140 a few years ago. Or perhaps the price of sugar when it ran
to 28 cents last year; everybody uses sugar.
Despite the
fact that gold can act as an alarm bell, few Americans or
anyone, for that matter among the hoi polloi care or even
know the stuff exists except as an academic matter. Suppressing
the gold price is not only vastly harder but much less important
than it was during the last market.
Here are some
questions I'd like answered:
Q: Why
do these banks (JPMorgan, etc.) even give a damn, in the first place,
what the price of the metals might be?
The only reason
that makes any sense is that they are acting as proxies for the
US Treasury; the Treasury doesn't go into the markets itself. But
does it direct a commercial bank to act for it to buy or sell gold?
It might. But there's zero proof of any sort it's doing that.
These banks
have no dog in the fight; they couldn't care less what the metals
prices are and have no reason to try manipulating the market.
Q: Why
has there been zero word from their traders about how stupid their
bosses are for fighting a gigantic 10-year bull market? These guys
all know each other, and they gossip with the same delight as teenage
girls.
It's hard to
keep a long-term illegal collusion a secret. Two parties might possibly
be able to keep a secret. But six or eight commercial banks acting
in broad daylight? It's said that three individuals can keep a secret,
but only if two of them are dead. But for a half-dozen trading operations
to do so? Wall Street is the world's greatest rumor mill. But there's
never been a rumor (outside of those created in conspiracy circles,
who offer no sources) that the bullion banks are acting, in concert
or individually, as agents of Timmy Geithner.
Q: If,
as alleged, these banks have been short gold from the bottom of
the gold bear market at $255 in 2001 and the silver bear market
at $4.25, also in 2001, how can they possibly absorb tens or hundreds
of billions of losses? Did they expect to take the metals to a fraction
of their 1971 lows?
Trading desks
make mistakes. But they don't stay short in one of history's great
bull markets it's not the way traders earn bonuses. How stupid
are the supposed "not for profit" sellers of gold supposed
to be?
Q: Exactly
where and how do they supposedly get the capital to cover these
losses? Haven't they ever heard the old saw, "He who sells
what isn't his'n must give it back or go to prison"? No bank
can tie up billions in capital fighting the market for a decade.
Q: Exactly
who originated this idea of trying to suppress prices using the
futures markets?
Here a well-known
writer on this subject suggested the following to me, via an email,
when I asked: "The big commercials, starting some 25 years
ago, discovered they could dominate the market and force technical
traders in and out of the market when they wished at great profits
to the commercials. But they miscalculated and stayed in too long,
and now they are trapped."
I don't buy
that explanation for several reasons. Of course the big guys, like
commercials, are always bullying small speculators. The small guys
use technical trading systems, which make it easy to figure out
where they're buying and selling. Small traders are always minutes
behind the market. And small traders usually use way too much margin,
so they're prone to being squeezed and panicked. This has always
been true, not just for the last 25 years. It's part of why small
traders are notorious for losing. The commercials are typically
on the other side of the trade.
But one thing
is for certain: nobody (certainly not commercials) allows himself
to get in so deep he's trapped for 12 years in one of history's
greatest bull markets.
Q: Why
fight the market, and get trapped, in just gold and silver? Why
aren't they trying to suppress copper, platinum and palladium as
well? For that matter, every commodity?
I don't credit
the people who run central banks or national treasuries with a great
deal of financial acumen; they're basically just political hacks,
flunkies that went to "good" schools, dress well and like
feeling important in a safe niche in the bureaucracy. But they don't
want to lose their jobs by being that wrong for that long.
Q: Why
would the US Treasury (if it's behind a gold suppression scheme)
make things easier for the Chinese, the Russians, the Indians and
numerous other developing countries by suppressing the gold price?
They simply take advantage of the lower price to buy more.
The arguments
for suppression of gold make very little sense when you examine
them. The arguments for silver make absolutely no sense at all;
it's a tiny market that nobody cares about except for silver fanatics,
who treat it like a religious icon. That said, I'm at least as bullish
on silver as gold but a discussion of that will have to wait.
If anyone could
answer these questions, I'd appreciate it. I advise readers to buy
gold even at current levels but I'd like to see them
do it for the right reasons. And it seems to me the arguments about
gold manipulation are more redolent of religious belief than economic
reasoning.
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May
18, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Casey’s
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
and Associates
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