für Neueinsteiger, die alten Hasen haben es bereits gelesen und vergessen ( dank hard-disk kann man sein eigenes Lexikon anlegen )
http://www.cash.ch/news/boerse…t_worden_sein-3227658-598
Auch die britische HSBC und die kanadische Bank of Nova Scotia sehen sich mit dem Vorwurf konfrontiert, über Jahre hinweg das Silber-Fixing beeinfluss zu haben.
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history HSBC:
http://www.etftrends.com/2011/…ver-etfs-go-head-to-head/
ETFS Physical Silver (NYSEArca: SIVR)
Assets: $635.6 million
Expense ratio: 0.30%
Inception date: July 24, 2009
Where is the silver physically kept? The silver bars are kept in London
Who is the custodian?*: HSBC
http://www.goldcore.com/goldco…-876-million-worth-poland
Silver Bars Being Secured By HSBC – Buy $876 Million Worth From Poland
The main customers of Polish silver in recent years have been the United Kingdom, Germany and Belgium. HSBC appears to be one of their main customers now.
(..)
HSBC did not comment on the deal and it only came to light as KGHM is a listed company and had to report the deal which was then picked up in Polish media.
The massive deal could simply be HSBC securing supply for the NYSE listed ETFS Physical Silver as they are the custodian.
Or it could be that senior people in HSBC are concerned about securing supply as they expect robust investment demand to continue and possibly increase resulting in higher prices.
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http://www.goldinvest.de/index…-den-preis-belasten-31158
http://www.etftrends.com/2011/…ver-etfs-go-head-to-head/
http://www.wealthdaily.com/articles/silver-price-fix/5236
The daily silver fix is a 117-year old process whereby three large trading houses – Canada’s Scotiabank, Germany’s Deutsche Bank, and the British division of HSBC – determine silver’s price by phone conference at noon London time each business day. Gold, for its part, has five trading houses agreeing to fix its daily price.
(..)
Deustche Bank recently resigned its membership on the silver and gold fixes, leaving just Scotiabank and HSBC to take care of the silver price all by themselves – which makes the conspiracists laugh all the more.
The UK’s Financial Conduct Authority subsequently asked Deutsche Bank to remain on the fixing board until a smooth transition to another silver benchmark can be made, hopefully by August 14th when the London silver fix will finally be broken.
(..)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/gr…-eye-silver-price-fixing/ 9th June 2014
In April 2014, London Silver Market Fixing Limited announced that it will stop administrating silver prices in August this year. Meanwhile, the prices will continue to be administrated by members of the London Silver Market Fixing Limited – Deutsche Bank, HSBC and Bank of Nova Scotia. This news came at a time when a number of U.S.-based investors and traders have filed up to 20 different antitrust claims against Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Barclays, Societe Generale and Bank of Nova Scotia, for collaborating to manipulate gold prices. Subsequently, Deutsche Bank resigned from its seat on London gold fixing after failing to find buyers for the seat. The German bank has also planned to resign from silver price fixing starting May 2014, since it failed to attract a replacement on the silver fix seat. As a result, the London Silver Market Fixing Limited decided to disband the three-member institution and Deutsche Bank postponed its resignation to mid-August.
http://www.arabianmoney.net/go…tant-for-the-gold-market/
Barclays fined $44m 6th-June-2014
The FCA announced on May 23rd that it had already fined one of the four banks, Barclays $44 million because one of its traders sought to influence the price setting process in 2012. It’s hard to believe this was an isolated incident.
(..)
Cartel over
So take away the cartel on August 14th 2014 and the market can test this hypothesis, and it is hard to see how this can be anything other than positive for the price of silver. Gold may also not be far behind in breaking out of its old fashioned price fix but this time silver is in the lead.
Where will the price of silver go? Certainly $100 as an adjustment for inflation over 34 years would look very conservative.
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MF global
http://www.goldseiten.de/artik…dagewesener-Skandal-.html
MF Global soll sich in großem Stil mit PIGS-Anleihen verspekuliert haben. Die Deckungslücke, so Celente, betrug ca. 600 Mio. USD, die von den Kundenkonten verschwanden. Die CME als Clearingstelle erklärte kurz später, 300 Mio. USD der Lücke decken wollten. Warum nur 300 Mio. USD? Der Schaden in das Vertrauen der Futuresmärkte kann gewaltig sein.
Die drei Teile des Interviews von Gerald Celente bei Alex Jones können Sie über folgende Links aufrufen:
video-1
video-2
video-3
Ein Update gibt es hier:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VZBXerY46us&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=csU1IhacwRc&feature=relmfu
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GH2Tb8Yx0II&feature=relmfu
Im neuen Video sagt Celente, er habe mit dem Broker gesprochen und dort erfahren, daß er NICHTS zurückbekommen werde. Das Geld ist unauffindbar verschwunden. Celente wirft die Frage auf, warum die CME den riesigen Schaden für die Futures-Märkte riskiert, wo sie angeblich ein so hohes Vermögen hat. Er vermutet, das Ganze sei ein großer Betrug, das Geld wird nicht erstattet, da das Material für die Lieferung der Futures nicht vorhanden ist.
Das verschwundene Geld soll neuen Gerüchten zufolge zu J.P. Morgan überwiesen worden sein.
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