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Why focus on the fundamentals impacting a market when it is market movements
that impact the fundamentals?
August Gold reached $444.20 on June 23 and closed at $419.40 yesterday. For
many - including newly adorned conspiracy theorist Peter Grandich - the latest
sell off in gold has been brought about by the evil gold manipulators.
"Why at 7:20AM EST does the gold community believe gold deserves to be
up $5 but in just one hour (and no new news) do players on the Comex hit
the ground selling hard and lead gold to be up less than a buck????...I have
not been a card-carrying member of the "gold is manipulated" fringe group
within the metals and mining industry. But after Friday's trading pattern
on the Comex and the opening today, I think I will be contacting them for
an application." Grandich.
Enthralling as the great gold conspiracy is, it is difficult to believe that
knowledgeable gold bulls do not see these recurring gold price declines coming
beforehand. To be sure, the latest price decline is just the latest signal
that the commercials control the gold price (whether they do this legally is
open for interpretation).
Before looking ahead lets first take a look back: The commercials added a
remarkable 60,765 contracts to their net short position for the week ended
June 21 (the fourth largest weekly net short addition on record), and the commercials
added an additional 25,152 short contracts to this position for the week ended
June 28. Incidentally, Grandich and company could not have known about the
25,152 short contracts before the alleged 'bear raid' on July 1 (the COT statistics
were not available when the bear raid began). Nevertheless, the statistics
told us that the commercials were adding to their net short position in dramatic
fashion as gold rallied to $434 an ounce, and the only speculation to be made
was that commercials were padding this position as gold rallied above $440.
Suffice to say, the sell signal on gold was so obvious leading into the last
week of June it almost defied mention.
To simplify things: when the commercial net short position is above 40% of
open interest expect a sell off, and when the commercial net short position
is below 20% of open interest expect a rally.
Conspiracy theorists can easily argue that the above chart is proof that the
price of gold is being manipulated. After all, in no other major market, save
silver, do the commercials consistently accumulate shorts and accurately time
(and profit from) every major near term top.
While it is impossible to refute this logic, the issue nonetheless boils down
to one question: Is it illegal to try to move a financial market with the goal
of igniting and profiting from subsequent movements? The answer, of course,
is YES (think Citigroup in Eurobonds). But with regulatory oversight being
uncooperative the only way to prove and/or stop the gold manipulation is to
make the commercials (and their backers?) come up with the hard gold to cover
their paper trades. Think of the commercial rigging as a giant naked short
trade. With the commercials having deep pockets forcing them to cover gold
they do not have is difficult to do.
Looking Ahead
Gold is declining and this means that the commercials are covering their shorts
for profits. Accordingly, and assuming that more than 3-years of infallible
statistical events hold firm, the outlook for gold - based solely on COT -
is negative but improving.
Another area of interest for gold watchers is the US dollar. With the Euro
having fallen and not likely to get up in the near term, and no other major
currency backed by the yield/growth combination being offered by America, the
dollar could take a few moments more before resuming its decline. However,
with the dollar commercials - which are not as proficient at generating a sell
off as their gold counterparts - continuing to add to their record net short
position (futures & options) the outlook is anything but positive.

With the threat of global rebalancing not about to vanish anytime soon, gold
should avoid walking the plank and retesting $400 an ounce. But don't be surprised
if gold walks the line until the US dollar resumes its downtrend. The line
in question is drawn by the commercials, and can be studied each Friday when
the COT statistics are
released. While these statistics do not comment on global supply/demand
trends in gold, they are nonetheless what usually move the gold market.
In short, the next time gold falls by $5 an ounce don't go looking for what
'new news' development made the decline possible. Rather, understand that the
$5 decline is the new news. Like it or not, with volatility being shorted since
2003, hedge funds awash with cash, and 'conundrum' infecting various financial
markets, price movements themselves are an important fundamental today.
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