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TED
BUTLER'S ARCHIVES
TED BUTLER COMMENTARY
March 6, 2007
Keeping It Simple
(This essay was written by silver analyst Theodore butler, an
independent consultant. Investment Rarities does not necessarily endorse
these views, which may or may not prove to be correct.)
I hadn’t planned to write this week, but market developments were
dramatic enough to warrant some commentary. Since my recent articles
concerned potential high risk/reward and volatility, due to an extreme
mismatch in the futures market structure in gold and silver, the
subsequent sell-off and volatility were not unexpected. Granted, the $50
gold and $2 silver thumping was extreme, but so too was the tech fund
long/dealer short position on the COMEX, as documented in the Commitment
of Traders Report (COT). Obviously, we truly were at a critical
juncture.
The most recent COT, for positions held as of 2/27 (just before the
sell-off began in earnest), confirmed, and even exceeded, expected
extreme tech fund long/dealer short position readings in gold and silver
futures. In fact, there was a notable record set in silver. The
concentrated net short position of the 4 largest traders reached an
historic level of more than 263 million ounces, up over 36 million
ounces for the week. Please think about that for a moment. The 4 largest
commercial traders just happened to have the largest net short position
in the history of COMEX trading, and we dropped $2 per ounce in days. Do
you think that was coincidental?
In gold, the total net commercial short position rose to a combined (COMEX
and CBOT) 206,000 contracts (20.6 million ounces), a short position
greater than at any other time, save for one previous week (Oct 11,
2005). From the price low in January until the most recent COT, the
combined net tech fund long/dealer short position in gold grew by almost
115,000 contracts (11.5 million ounces), with a 22,000 contract net
increase in the past week alone. Gold subsequently fell almost $50 in
days. Again, I ask you, do you think that fall was coincidental to the
dealers having a near record short position? Further, do you think it
was just coincidental that gold and silver had such extreme short
positions and both fell so much in such a short period of time?
Let’s keep this simple. Gold rose $80 and silver rose $2.50 an ounce
from early January to last week, because 11.5 million ounces of paper
gold and 120 million ounces of paper silver were bought by tech funds
and sold by the dealers during the price rise. So far, gold has fallen
$50 and silver $2, because those paper positions are being liquidated.
No other reason comes close to explaining the price movements. Not
currency, not inflation, not ETF or retail physical buying or selling,
not world tensions, not charts, not anything. Given the stark reality of
the verifiable data of the COTs, it is hard to understand how any
observer of gold or silver does not see this. Let me be clear – while
the COTs may not always predict the future with pinpoint accuracy
(although they can at times), they always explain a big move afterward.
This adds tremendous understanding for future analysis.
What now? Undoubtedly, there has been significant liquidation of tech
fund long and dealer short positions on the decline. That’s what the
decline is all about. Has there been enough liquidation to pound the
table and pronounce the market fully liquidated and at a very low risk
level? No. Can we rally from here? Sure. Can we still sell-off sharply?
Sure. Will the dealers succeed, as always? Maybe not, but history
suggests they will. Will there be continued volatility? Count on it.
To their credit, I have noticed many more analysts and commentators
and investors embracing the logic of the COTs as never before. As a
long-time observer of the COTs, I welcome them and wish to address them
now. You now know why gold and silver went up in the past two months and
why they went down so much in days. It could not be clearer. There were
no dramatic changes in gold or silver supply/demand fundamentals during
this time - no sudden production or consumption shocks, no grassroots
movement by investors to buy or sell real gold or silver in great
quantities, no obvious world event that impacted either metal. You now
know the price moves were caused by paper trading on the COMEX and CBOT.
I ask you to take this knowledge and do something constructive with
it. I ask you consider that this dictating of the price of gold and
silver by paper and electronic trading on the COMEX and CBOT by a small
number of large traders is in direct violation of US commodity law. This
law holds that price should be set away from the futures markets and be
determined in the real world of supply and demand. Futures trading
should discover, or uncover, what the true price should be, and not be
the sole determinant of price at any time. If you now know from the COTs
that the price of gold and silver have been set by the futures market,
you also now know that this is illegal activity.
I ask you to do something about it. Something that can’t hurt and
just might help. I ask you to communicate with your readers and with the
regulators on what you know to be true, namely, that the price of gold
and silver has been set on the COMEX and CBOT and that this is contrary
to commodity law. I’ve been doing it for more than 20 years and feel
fortunate that I have done so. You will not be embarrassed for doing so.
Some might say it’s a wasted effort and that I’m just whining about
the recent drops. That’s nonsense. Complaining about a manipulation,
when a manipulation clearly exists, is not whining, especially when you
prepare yourself accordingly. Go back and count the analysts who
cautioned of high risk before the sell-off. Anyone who has approached
these markets from the premise that they are manipulated and that it has
been more fruitful to monitor the manipulation by use of the COTs has
come out better than any other approach. But the ability to analyze a
crooked market doesn’t make the market any less crooked. You don’t have
to tolerate manipulated markets quietly. |