Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

And Then There’s This…Saturday, June 7th, 2008

Jun 7th, 2008 | By Ed Steer | Category: Gold Market

Neither gold nor silver showed any signs of life until the Sydney market closed in their afternoon.

From there, both metals rose in fits and starts all through London, but then began to tack on some gains once the Comex opened for business. However, the rise in prices did not go unopposed. You can see from looking at the Kitco gold chart; that once in London trading…and three times in New York trading…gold got sold off slightly when it showed any signs of “irrational exuberance” to the upside. Silver was the same.

Although I’m delighted with Friday’s action, I’m actually a bit underwhelmed by it. Firstly, in forty-eight hours, oil tacked on about $16…and the dollar was down 1.4 cents. These are monster moves…both of them…and very gold friendly. Despite that, gold did nothing on Thursday. All the gains came on Friday…such as they were. Remember that oil was about $110 and the US$ was a hair under 70 cents when gold was at its peak of $1,040 or so. We barely cracked $900 in gold on Friday…and silver is still down about 25% from its high in mid-March. So you can see why I’m not jumping up and down. But regardless of the monster sell-off in the equity markets, the HUI put in a pretty good performance.

Despite the run-up in price yesterday, there was just decent Comex volume on Friday, not huge volume. As far as Thursday’s open interest numbers go, gold o.i. rose 1,543 contracts, and silver added another 882 contracts. Volume was obviously thin on Thursday as well.

We are, once again, well through both the 20- and 50-day moving averages for silver. Gold closed on its 50-day m.a. yesterday and is about $5 above its 20-day m.a. As I mentioned, volume has not been extremely heavy in either metal for the last couple of days. That could change quickly once the tech funds show up on the long side.

As far as the Commitment of Traders goes, the “8 or less” traders (bullion banks) covered some of their shorts in both metals while the tech funds pitched their respective long positions. There wasn’t as much of a clean-out as either Ted Butler or myself were expecting. We were expecting at least double what was actually reported…but maybe this is the best the bullion banks could do! Despite the clean-out, the concentrated short position in gold hit another new high record amount. The boyz are now short 84% of the entire Comex gold market. In silver it’s 79%. Yet the CFTC and your mining companies do nothing.

And lastly, I see that Dennis Gartman got totally blown out of his gold short positions. Al Korelin, from the Korelin Economics Report, interviewed me about this…and ‘all of the above’…in our Friday commentary which is linked here.

I have three stories today, so I’m glad it’s the weekend, as I hope you can find the time to read them…if they suit your fancy. The first one is from The Wall Street Journal of all places. This is the second gold story that has come from a senior ‘fellow’ of the Council on Foreign Relations in the last sixty days. Does it mean anything? Who knows. You can decide. The article is entitled “Contracts as Good as Gold” and is linked here.

Then a day after the above story showed up, this next story appeared in the Asia Times out of Hong Kong. The co-authors of this piece look and sound like they’re reasonably well connected too. Any relation to these two articles? Don’t know that either…however, gold is front and centre in both. It’s worth reading, and is entitled “Time overdue for a world currency” and is linked here.

And lastly comes the following Reuters story filed from Jerusalem. I would suspect that the contents of this story had something to do with what happened in the gold, oil, currency and stock markets on Friday. The article is entitled “Israel to attack Iran unless enrichment stops–minister”. The link is here.

You can fool some of the people all of the time, and those are the ones you want to concentrate on. – George W. Bush, Washington, D.C. – March 31, 2001

Today’s video will take you back about 40 years. My God…where has the time gone??? Turn up the volume on your speakers and enjoy! The link is here.

I noted in a Bloomberg story that US household wealth fell the most in five years….$1.7 trillion worth in Q1/08. Real estate-related assets dropped by $329 billion, the most since 1952. And even though the Dow was down 411 points (and falling) just before the close, the ‘Catch a Falling Knife” brigade made sure that it didn’t close on its low. Is everything still fine? Monday’s trading should be educational.

Enjoy the rest of your weekend, and I’ll see you bright and early Tuesday morning.

Casey Research correspondent-at-large Ed Steer is a keen observer of the financial scene and a board member of GATA.org.

Source: And Then There’s This…Saturday, June 7th, 2008


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By Ed Steer

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Ed Steer is a contributor to Casey's Daily Resource, your “Go To” source for Natural Resource Investments.

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