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For markets of December 15th
| CLOSES |
INDICATIVE LEASE RATES Based upon 30 day maturities |
| DEC GOLD |
410.10 |
GOLD |
.00/.50% |
| MARCH SILVER |
5.64 |
SILVER |
.50/2.00% |
| JAN PLATINUM |
810.90 |
PLAT |
5.00/12.00% |
General Comments:
Having written most of my weekly commentary on Saturday morning, I was forced
to trash it completely on Sunday morning as news of Saddam's capture was splashed
across the screen. While the tangible benefit of his capture, alive, has little
to no benefit or detriment to the financial markets, the psychological rapture
of the US achievement should have great import. And, markets are, in their
very essence, almost purely psychological with fundamentals such as supply
and demand just stoking the imagination and interest. Look for the USD to
react positively, look for the precious metals to fall in concert, and perhaps
look for a continuation of the rally on Wall Street. But, also look for
these movements to be relatively short-lived as investors/speculators begin
to realize in the coming days, or weeks, that his capture does not really change
all that much in today's turbulent political or economic dynamics.
If (and that's a very if) the markets act as predicted, precious metals prices
should decline as the USD rallies, and another opportunity to enter the market
on the long side should arise. It is difficult to ascertain just how sharply
the precious metals will fall, but it could be anywhere from moderate to completely
vicious. As the technical indicators have been quite negative in the recent
weeks, screaming that the USD is due for a counter trend rally and that the
precious metals have been overbought, the most logical forecast is for the
USD to rally sharply and gold and silver to cascade lower. Happily, clients
of the firm are more-or-less flat both of these markets, having reduced upside
exposure as per our recommendations these past few weeks. Unhappily, clients
of the firm are still short the USD, with significant gains marked to the market
as of Friday. The next few days should be fascinating.
As expected in previous commentaries, the gold market had a difficult time
of it last week, even with the Euro streaking up 1% for the week. Several attempts
to continue the rally north of the $410 price level in the February contract
were thwarted, and prices closed the week up $2.80. This market continued to
be dominated by the influence of the foreign exchange markets, but, as thought,
underperformed as large speculative concerns turned sellers probably due to
end-of-the- year concerns. I continue to fear large scale speculative liquidation
of existent long positions, and the news that Saddam has been captured alive
may be the spark to this fire.
Silver prices rose by 15 cents for the week, plumbing heights not seen since
1999. Even without the breathtaking news from Iraq, I would expect prices to
decline, and perhaps sharply, due to the release of news in regards to Chinese
exports of silver in the coming year, and newly divulged, and very bearish,
information regarding their production. As per Reuters, the Chinese government
is expected to issue export permits for silver on December 15th for 3,050 tons,
up from 2,200 just last year. While the additional sales of yet another
27 million ounces of silver is certainly not welcome news for the bulls in
this market, what is most distressing is that this trend looks to continue,
and perhaps accelerate. Just two years ago, the Chinese produced 2000 tons
per annum, and now smelters in that nation are pushing out 5,000 tons per annum
as a byproduct of zinc, copper, and lead. With internal demand in China estimated
at just 1000 tons per annum, this leaves enormous room for adding, and increasing,
physical sales of silver. With the global demand for silver in photographical
use dropping by 4% per annum, the scales are now becoming heavily weighed against
further rallies in the silver price.
On the other hand, if silver ever sheds its predominant disposition as being
an "industrial" metal, if investors and speculators one day see it as a monetary
asset, much akin to how they see gold, then this market changes dramatically.
Please note that the Chinese sales total just about $550 million dollars per
annum, a paltry sum IF investors are interested buyers. But, we have
not seen much of that recently with the recent rallies pushed by speculative
interests only. The heart of this market, the supply/demand fundamentals, is
preaching extreme caution amidst an environment of oversupply. I am quickly
becoming a rather large bear in this market with silver prices north of $5.60
per ounce.
Platinum was up almost $29 for the week, pushing to new 23 year highs, as
speculators continue to buy even as prices go higher. The fundamentals for
this metal are, and have been, truly superb as supply deficits are seen continuing
for years, while demand appears to continue unabated. But, one wonders just
how much higher they can go, from a practical level. There is an old cliché among
experienced traders that "the cure for high prices is high prices". To quote
Mr. Nick Moore, global head of commodity research at JP Morgan, "there is a
fear that platinum .... simply prices itself out of the market". In other words,
high prices promote added supply and curtail demand. This has not been the
case with platinum prices over the past years, but getting long this market
at these lofty levels is rather uncomfortable. I do expect that platinum will
be sharply lower Monday, sliding as the other precious metals decline.
Palladium was up over $9 for the week, still within its well traveled trading
range of about $190 to $215. While historical precedents would argue for higher
prices for this metal, it has yet to prove it's meddle (pun intended). The
market has to tell us that it wants to go higher, and it hasn't voiced such
intentions as of yet.
The new ETF (Exchange Traded Fund), backed by the World Gold Council, and
now trading on the London Exchange, has surpassed all expectations in its few
days of trading. Almost 500,000 ounces of gold were bought on its opening day
on December 9th (with gold trading near $410). Nearly 219,000 traded the next
day and 26,000 ounces on Thursday. Certainly there was considerable pent-up
demand that exhibited itself immediately upon the launch of the product, but,
we will need to see what occurs in the coming weeks. But, so far, I am rather
impressed, but still skeptical of continuing success.
GoldCorp Australia also reports record high investor interest in gold, both
in their AAA rated storage programs and a "security" that trades in Australia,
which is a proxy for gold. The Shanghai Gold Exchange is also growing, having
traded 23.5 tons of gold in November. As other venues appear, the LBMA in London
continues to post lower numbers in the movement of physical precious metals.
It is still clear that investors/speculators still favor the futures markets,
or derivatives, rather than traditional access.
I was amused by the reports of a Canadian gold producer, Goldcorp, who after
screaming to the market that "gold was money" (no, they said it was better
than that), and having built up a stash of some 270,000 ounces of gold from
their own production and purchases in the market, decided to sell all of it
into the market. Certainly they, and their stockholders, benefited from their
market "play", as they appear to have sold the gold quite well. But, the message
that they should have voicing is that gold is cheap at some level and expensive
at another. In other words, a trading market. No surprise.
On to the Commitment of Traders reports, as of December 9th, both futures
and options:
GOLD
| Long Speculative |
Short Speculative |
Long Commercial |
Short Commercial |
Small Long Spec |
Small Short Spec |
| 141,727 |
15,031 |
124,265 |
303,473 |
79,130 |
26,619 |
| -3,729 |
+1,603 |
+1,923 |
-2,834 |
+3,683 |
+3,110 |
During the relevant week, gold prices were up some $5 as open interest increased
by an additional 11,000 contracts. Significant changes in the ownership of
contracts are hard to find, as the statistics above exemplify. With the capture
of Saddam this morning, the most relevant ratio is that long specs held 220,000
contracts against 41,000 contracts held by short specs. This ratio of 5.4 to
one MAY have profound meaning when the inevitable selling in gold begins on
Sunday night, as the USD rallies. I look for gold to do much worse than
the Dollar, i.e., if the USD falls 1%, look for gold to fall 1.5 to 2%,
or worse. Clients of the firm are mostly flat this market, and I look to be
an aggressive buyer on this decline, to reestablish significant long positions.
Recommendations will follow.
SILVER
| Long Speculative |
Short Speculative |
Long Commercial |
Short Commercial |
| 54,132 |
3,574 |
18,106 |
95,398 |
| +3,621 |
+833 |
-3,170 |
-833 |
Unlike the gold market, the large long specs were buyers of silver during
the week, pushing prices up some 13 to 14 cents. With the news, look for silver
to get punished in the coming days, as the specs will be aggressive sellers
in a very thin market. This could get real ugly, and fast. Again, clients of
the firm are virtually flat, and I would look to reestablish long positions
at much lower levels. The fundamentals have changed in this market, pushing
me more and more to the bear side.
GOLD RECOMMENDATIONS:
(positions and recommendations are available to clients and subscribers only)
SILVER RECOMMENDATIONS:
(positions and recommendations are available to clients and subscribers only)
PLATINUM RECOMMENDATIONS:
(positions and recommendations are available to clients and subscribers only)
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