Beiträge von Schwabenpfeil

    The John Brimelow Report


    Looking more like C Bank capping.


    Thursday, December 23 2004


    Indian ex-duty premiums: AM N/A, PM $9.23, with world gold at $439.60 and $441.55. (Reuters garbled the AM Bombay price; Madras, which usually trades somewhat below Bombay, showed $7.99.) Very high; lavish for legal imports. The rupee resumed its import-facilitating rise today. A weak oil price, of course immediately improves rupee sentiment (and hence India’s gold-importing ability) because the country is such a heavy oil importer.


    Japan was closed. Shanghai Gold Exchange premiums rose again and now straddle $2. As mentioned before, probably the most meaningful inference which can be drawn from this is that the Chinese authorities have no intention of revaluing their currency.


    Yesterday, as Refco Research politely says


    "February gold opened 40 cents higher reflecting marginal overnight weakness in the dollar. From open on the COMEX, dealer selling and the absence of movement in the currencies quickly capped the February contract’s progress. Selling in gold then intensified with some fund long liquidation appearing…February gold settled down $1.5…"


    Volume yesterday was 25,003 but open interest only fell 492 lots to 319, 463. Any fund liquidation was apparently off set, possibly by short selling.


    Essentially the same thing is happening today, with the significant difference that the pronounced dollar weakness is destroying the reflexive analysis that gold mirrors the Euro, or tracks the dollar. Gold actually recovered yesterday’s losses very promptly around the Indian opening (about 11 PM NY time) and had a strong AM fix of $442.40, virtually the high of the day. (Rising into the fix is usually a sign that physical demand is comparatively influential) Downward pressure has been, once again, a New York phenomenon.


    A prominent Bullion dealer circulated a note this morning reporting rumors of Central Bank activity. Clearly, a determined seller of some kind is capping the market.


    The noted gold bear has published a 32 page precious metals 2005 forecast predicting a gold high of $465 and a low of $365, for an average of $390. Essentially it is dollar triumphalist and hopeful of steadily heavy Central Bank selling.


    Gold’s friends will find the included comment by Mitsui’s technical analyst more congenial:


    "The long-term profile of gold registers a significant change with the break, some twelve months in the making, of ten year resistance centred on $420-430. This has the potential to reverse to form the upper edge of a broad bed of support extending down to the 2004 low at $374. This broad support band will act like a sponge absorbing forthcoming corrections...Once any period of corrective churning is complete the prevailing uptrend…has good potential to support a further advance… The next upside target is to $480 while the best case scenario interprets a three year flag-type continuation formation which projects a target zone to $570-$600."


    I will probably publish once or twice next week when data is available. Best wishes for Christmas to those who care to accept them.


    JB

    *The following on Swiss gold sales might be important or immaterial:


    THE "NEUE ZUERCHER ZEITUNG" REPORTED DEC. 22ND IN A LEAD STORY THAT SWITZERLAND HAS DECIDED TO POSTPONE ANY DECISION REGARDING THEIR DISTRIBUTION AND OR SALE OF SWISS GOVERNMENTS ENTIRE GOLD RESERVES (SCHEDULED ORIGINALLY TO BE ACTED UPON BEFORE YEAR END) UNTIL FURTHER DETAILED DISCUSSION, RESEARCH AND DEBATE TO COMMENCE AGAIN MID JANUARY 2005.
    REGARDS
    ELMAR


    *If they are referring to further Swiss gold sales beyond the almost completed 1300 tonne sale, the postponement would be meaningful in light of the recent Bundesbank decision. The Swiss are renowned for their financial market acumen. Their short-sighted dumping of cheap gold is already a blight on this acumen. Further sales could be fatal. How will it look in the years ahead with gold at $1,000+ with the Germans owning all their gold and the Swiss having sold their stash at bargain basement prices?


    The euro closed at 135.08, up 1.21 and 30 points over its old all-time high. The pound gained .91 to 192.36, while the yen rose to 103.56. The dollar fell .46 to 81.55.

    At some point next year this tedium of having to put up with the cabal’s daily insults will all change. Gold will not only keep up with any sort of euro advance, it will explode above $455 and outpace the euro's upside activity by a wide margin. This will be the sign the crooks are losing, or have lost control of their rig. Watching gold trade then will be a joy and bring smiles instead of infuriating frowns.


    Daily recap:


    *The London AM Fix was $442.40, the high of the day, made before The Gold Cartel went into concerted action.


    *$443 seems to be the latest capping level by the goon squad. Each time gold is about to take that level out, Hannibal and the cannibals show up.


    *Goldman "Hannibal Lecter" Sachs and Deutsche Bank were the price cappers today. It is almost ALWAYS Goldman Sachs on the sell side on price capping days. Bringing that bit of news to your attention is like reporting on a broken record. No wonder their quarterly profits were so handsome. They have the US Government and Fed as a partner.


    *Republic Bank was a substantial silver buyer today, as it was yesterday on the dip. They have not been seen on the buy side in some time.


    *Our Comex gold floor source has felt for some time that if the euro took out 135, gold would fly. Not if the corrupt Gold Cartel says no way.


    *Once the locals saw what the cabal was up to this holiday shortened session they began selling, realizing gold had no hope of making any serious advances to the upside on this day of massive intervention.

    The euro is busting out of a well defined pennant formation to the upside into new high ground, while gold is stuck in a narrow uptrend channel, following its orchestrated collapse. Each time gold reaches the upper band of the channel, the cabal stops the price rise cold, regardless of what the euro does.


    While the euro made an all-time high today, gold fell to as low as 326 in euros before recovering to 327, WAY off its recent high of 344. The heinous Gold Cartel has gone into one of its most aggressive manipulation modes ever (in a relative sense to the action of the dollar) over the past couple of weeks. Of special note is gold’s failure to keep up with the euro which became pronounced right after the World Gold Council’s GLD sold 15 tonnes of gold the day before gold collapsed $20. Some coincidence, eh? Ever since then gold has struggled despite favorable world events along with the strong euro and weaker dollar in general.


    Which brings me to one of my gold pet peeves. There were many gold bulls out there jumping up and down about GLD and how it would stimulate gold demand. This was expected to be a substantial boon for the price. MIDAS argued it was immaterial compared to exposing The Gold Cartel and their rigging operation. If the World Gold Council would get off its fat duff and do the right thing, gold would have blown through $600 per ounce by now. Instead, it comes up with some flawed gold product, which just happens to appear to be instrumental in BURYING the gold price, not enhancing it.


    The proof is in the pudding. The price of gold is some $8 to $10 lower than when GLD kicked in, while the euro is a good deal higher. So what good did their new buying do? Squat, that’s what it did…or didn’t do!

    (And a hearty thanks and best wishes to Janice Dorn for her wonderful quotes this past year.)


    7:35 CST: Gold has become unwatchable for me. Constantly witnessing the blatant manipulation all day long is just not worth it these days. All I do is get angry at what is transpiring and furious at the dimwits in the mainstream gold world who always fail to whisper a peep about the obvious. Thus, I have taken to stepping away from viewing the market action not long after the opening.


    What is particularly disturbing is how the price of gold is falling further and further behind that of the euro. Most everyone commenting on gold makes the point gold trades as the inverse of the dollar action. If that were true, gold would have taken out $455 today, as the euro blew into all-time new high ground this morning.


    The floor traders will tell you daily gold trading is mostly aligned with the euro. The euro goes up and it influences gold to the upside. The reverse is true on the downside. The problem is the other element in the trading which the mainstream gold world refuses to address: The Gold Cartel’s using the dollar/euro action to CAP the gold price via their continuing price manipulation scheme.


    A picture is worth a thousand words:


    March euro
    http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/EC/35


    February gold
    http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/GD/25

    December 23 – Gold $441.50 up $1.50 – Silver $6.87 up 9 cents


    All-Time High Euro, Gold Capping By Cabal Worsens - Won’t Last


    To all the supporters of GATA, wisdomwoman sends warmest wishes to you for the Holidays and the New Year:


    May you always walk in sunshine
    Slumber warm when night winds blow
    May you always live with laughter
    For a smile becomes you so


    May good fortune find your doorway
    May the bluebird sing your song
    May no trouble travel your way
    May no worry stay too long



    May your heartaches be forgotten
    May no tears be spilled
    May old acquaintance be remembered
    And your cup of kindness filled...Larry Markes and Dick Charles


    GO GATA!!!

    Zitat

    Original von Ulfur


    Meridian would hold 70 per cent of the new shares while holders of secured and certain unsecured convertible loan notes would get 25 per cent.


    Scheint, als ob die Aktionäre noch weniger als 1/20 Kapitalanteil erhalten werden.



    Hallo Ulfur,


    ja die Aktionäre werden (nach diesen Vorstellungen) noch deutlich weniger als 5 % bekommen. Die Inhaber der Wandelschuldverschreibungen bekommen statt dessen 25 % sicher. Vielleicht dämmert es ja jetzt auch den größten Ignoranten, weshalb der liebe Schwabenpfeil auf die Convertibles hinwies ;)



    Gruß
    Schwabenpfeil

    THE SPECTRE OF DEFLATION


    by John Calverley


    U.S. house prices rose 13% in the year to Q3, including an astonishing 42% leap in Nevada, 27% in California and 23% in Washington DC. Prices have risen a long way on the coasts over the last 7 years with gains of 134% in California, 103% in Massachusetts and 92% in New Jersey and 89% in New York. Inland regions have generally been more stable so the nationwide average gains since 1997 is a more moderate 65%. Nevertheless, with house price inflation accelerating, it looks as though the United States is in the early-to-middle stages of a bubble. In the U.K. and Australia more advanced bubbles are key factors in economic performance and monetary policy. The United States is likely to go the same way.


    One of the causes of the bubble is that people seem to have forgotten that house prices can fall as well as rise. And the risks of a significant fall are more acute now than for over 50 years because of the low rate of inflation in consumer prices and the threat of deflation. Between the 1950s and the mid 1990s falling consumer prices, deflation, was virtually unknown anywhere. The world's attention was focused entirely on battling rising prices, inflation, which had become the number one economic problem. But by the late 1990s the battle against inflation was won and deflation had emerged in several countries in Asia including Japan.


    Deflation is a new and troubling threat for all of us, brought up in an era of continuous inflation. Almost nobody alive today, even the venerable Mr. Greenspan, was an active market participant or policy-maker in the 1930s, the last time the United States suffered deflation. Yet, during the 19th century and right up to the 1930s, deflation was common, indeed even normal, while inflation was usually only seen at the height of economic booms and in wartime.


    In the U.S., deflation is still only a hypothetical possibility, but in Japan it is a painful reality. Japan's stock and property bubbles deflated rapidly in the early 1990s and a series of short-lived upswings were each soon ended by a new downturn. In this weak environment, inflation gradually dropped to zero and then deflation set in, starting in 1995. As of the end of 2004 Japan's price level has fallen a cumulative 10%.


    A world of very low inflation, and potentially deflation, makes the current house price bubbles more dangerous than in the past and, from an investor and homeowner point of view, means that houses are a more risky investment. After past price bubbles, house price adjustments were limited in nominal terms by the cushion of high underlying inflation. Indeed in the United States, the nationwide price index has never fallen in nominal terms. In fact, there was a 10% adjustment in real prices in the 1990s, but it was hidden by the high consumer price inflation of the time. In some regions, the real price adjustment was greater and so nominal prices fell too. For example, Californian home prices fell 10% in nominal terms in the early 1990s, with a 24% decline in real terms.


    How much effect would a fall in house prices have on the economy? The bursting of the 1990s stock market bubble wiped about $5 trillion off U.S. household wealth. It would take a 33% fall in home prices to have the same impact. A decline of this magnitude cannot be ruled out if valuation ratios for housing, such as the house price-earnings ratio or the house price-rents ratio returned to past cyclical lows, but it would only be likely in the context of a serious recession and a new rise in unemployment. However, wealth effects from declining house prices are usually found to be more virulent than those from falling stock markets, so a fall of "only" 10-20% in house prices could present Mr. Greenspan, or his successor, with a similar headache to the aftermath of the stock crash.


    But a housing crash would have other effects too. In past housing downturns residential investment fell sharply, by 40% in 1980-82 and by 24% in 1988-91. This is reflected in the monthly housing starts data, which typically halve during recessions. But starts only ticked down briefly during the 2001 recession and have since risen close to past peaks. Residential investment accounts for about 5% of GDP, so a severe house-building recession would be enough to cut GDP by 1-2% on its own.


    How likely is a U.S. housing bust? The economy enters 2005 with considerable momentum and with interest rates still low so it seems likely that house prices will continue to rise for a while, inflating the bubble further. Good news on the economic front will support house prices while rising mortgage rates (likely as bond yields move up) will threaten them. The outcome of these opposing forces will depend partly on how much mortgage rates do in fact rise. Continued good news on consumer price inflation would keep bond yields low and make higher home prices more likely. But house prices will also depend on whether the growing signs of a bubble mentality, now evident in some regions, extend further. When a bubble reaches the euphoric phase, rising interest rates may have little effect because
    people are entirely focused on the prospect of quick gains.


    The ideal outcome from here would be a period where house prices were broadly stable, allowing earnings and rents to catch up and valuations to moderate. A small fall in the market of 5-10% would help that process along, without causing too much hardship, though a nationwide 5-10% fall would almost certainly imply falls of 10-20% in parts of California and New England and other particularly high-priced areas. The most dangerous scenario is if house valuations are still extended when the next major shock hits the U.S. economy. Stock prices would likely be falling too, so that the economy would face a double dose of asset prices effects adding up to a much more lethal mixture than in the aftermath of the stock market bust.


    A large correction of house prices at some point, 20% for example, would be a painful process for homeowners as well as investors in housing. Moreover prices would likely only recover gradually since inflation and incomes growth would likely be very low at that point. Hence it is probable that prices would not return to their peak levels for 15 years or more. This might not worry some owner-occupiers. Many will have bought before the peak of the bubble so that, while they will see some erosion of their equity and perhaps suffer some disappointment, they may not be losing much, except on paper. Moreover, since mortgage rates would likely fall, people would be able to refinance at lower rates.


    However people relying on future appreciation to help fund their retirement could be very disappointed. Moreover some people would find the value of their house falling below the outstanding on their mortgage, i.e. negative equity, because of the greater decline in nominal house prices.


    For an investor in housing the scenario above would, to say the least, be a huge disappointment, because there is no capital gain for more than 15 years. Of course, provided he could find tenants and provided rents did not fall, his net rental yield should be positive so there would be some income after costs, though not much given the low level of rental yields, especially in the more bubbly areas. It is difficult to define exactly where the investor would end up, because a great deal depends on how big a loan he has and what rent he could obtain. But there is no doubt that this is what disappointed investors call "a very long term investment", or in other words a mistake! The choice is either sell and accept the loss or wait it out, but then miss the opportunity to make money elsewhere.


    A big adjustment like this is most likely when we see a sharp slowdown or recession and especially if house prices continue to rise rapidly in 2005, as seems likely unless mortgage rates rise very rapidly. The United States avoided a major recession in 2001, with the help of massive fiscal stimulus and rapid cuts in interest rates. But another downturn will come one day and, if house building and consumer spending crashes too, the recession will be more severe than in 2001. In a low inflation world, housing bubbles are a much more dangerous phenomenon.

    The gold shares continue to meander. The XAU lost .87 to 99.12, while the HUI gave up 1.58 to 214.64.


    How much affect has tax loss selling affected certain stocks? In my case, perhaps a good deal. My two largest holdings (Golden Star Resources, $3.83, up 12 cents and off a recent $3.40 52-week low) and Samex (76 cents up, 4 cents) are coming back to life. Golden Star, which traded $8.64 with gold in the mid-$420’s late last November, has been a real oinker the past year. It makes no sense for this up and coming gold producer, which has superb exploration properties in addition to their growing mining operation, to be trading down here at these levels. Not with gold at $440. Samex has popped back 40% from a recent 57 cent low. Both companies, which were big winners last year, are rebounding noticeably, even as the gold shares continue to struggle in general. Perhaps tax loss selling was a significant culprit as far as far as their recent price performances were concerned.


    GATA BE IN IT TO WIN IT!



    MIDAS

    Some Oldie But Goodie calls:


    Bill,
    Best wishes for Christmas and the New Year. May 2005 be the year the cabal died. I am grateful for you, Chris, and all the GATA board and members. Few people realize what Herculean duties GATA performs. It's uncomfortable to be contrarian these days. I remember back in the 90's the buzz on all the shill financial cables were names like Allen Srenka, Bill O'Neill, Bill Seidman, Doug Cohen and Joe Byers to name a few. I wrote down some of their less than prescient advice back then and here's what they said:


    "If gold is signaling inflation I'll kiss a pig". - Allen Srenka 9/29/99


    "Gold is so demonetized I'm hesitant to draw any conclusions about inflation in regards to it". - Bill O'Neill 8/4/99


    "Gold is not a safe haven bet anymore, why buy gold when you can get interest on a dollar. The dollar has replaced gold as a safe haven". - Bill
    Seidman 9/24/98


    "Gold is not a safe haven, the dollar is better haven. Central banks might unload their gold hordes". - Doug Cohen 8/28/98


    "There's no hope for gold, no inflationary pressures to merit gold investment". - Joe Byers 11/12/98


    Some of these buffoons still get face time on CNBC while GATA, who has been dead right, gets none. No matter. The dollar tsunami is coming and it will destroy many portfolios along the way. Gold will protect you as it has for centuries. My bet's on Bill's advice.... that's Murphy, not Seidman.
    James McShirley

    The starving kids have no political constituency and can’t vote.


    A sign of what is to come:


    U.S. Contractor Pulls Out of Reconstruction Effort in Iraq


    By T. Christian Miller, Times Staff Writer


    WASHINGTON — For the first time, a major U.S. contractor has dropped out of the multibillion-dollar effort to rebuild Iraq, raising new worries about the country's growing violence and its effect on reconstruction.


    Contrack International Inc., the leader of a partnership that won one of 12 major reconstruction contracts awarded this year, cited skyrocketing security costs in reaching a decision with the U.S. government last month to terminate work in Iraq…


    -END-

    Oh here we go…Progress. The Bush Administration is taking steps to cut the US fiscal budget. Starve the kids so we can spend more money in Iraq and bring democracy to people who want to blow us up.


    U.S. Cutting Food Aid Aimed at Self-Sufficiency


    By ELIZABETH BECKER
    Published: December 22, 2004


    WASHINGTON, Dec. 21 - In one of the first signs of the effects of the ever tightening federal budget, in the past two months the Bush administration has reduced its contributions to global food aid programs aimed at helping millions of people climb out of poverty.


    With the budget deficit growing and President Bush promising to reduce spending, the administration has told representatives of several charities that it was unable to honor some earlier promises and would have money to pay for food only in emergency crises like that in Darfur, in western Sudan. The cutbacks, estimated by some charities at up to $100 million, come at a time when the number of hungry in the world is rising for the first time in years and all food programs are being stretched.


    As a result, Save the Children, Catholic Relief Services and other charities have suspended or eliminated programs that were intended to help the poor feed themselves through improvements in farming, education and health.


    "We have between five and seven million people who have been affected by these cuts," said Lisa Kuennen, a food aid expert at Catholic Relief Services. "We had approval for all of these programs, often a year in advance. We hired staff, signed agreements with governments and with local partners, and now we have had to delay everything."..


    -END-

    CARTEL CAPITULATION WATCH


    The DOW continues to climb, up another 56 to 10,815. The DOG too, up 6 to 2157.


    March DOW
    http://futures.tradingcharts.com/chart/DJ/35


    Perhaps Jesse has it figured out:


    I said that a while back that it looked like Y2K all over again, with the Fed and Treasury falling all over themselves to float the market with coupon passes, Treasury repos, and hot money injections. At first I thought it might have been the elections and concern about a long recount, but afterwards when it continued it became obvious that is was something else altogether.


    The missing ingredient is now out there for all to see.


    Fannie is 9 to 13 billion dollars in the hole because of massive accounting/derivative fraud, the CEO,CFO,accountant have been fired, and about 330 billion in mortgage backed assets are now on deck for firesale liquididation in order to raise capital.


    There is almost no doubt in my mind that we are in the middle of a Treasury/Fed rescue of not only Fannie, but also of the financial system. Fannie is not only too big to fail, its too big to even let a hint of failure to occur to anyone. Hence, the miracle rally in stocks and bonds right into the holidays, and the revelations of Fannie leaking into the holiday market, easiest of all to prop and control.


    The objective is to liquify Fannie and prop it up while keeping the domestic, European and Asian markets anaesthesized.


    Play it where it lies.
    Jesse


    US economic news:


    08:30 Q3 final GDP reported 4% vs. consensus 3.9%; Price Deflator reported 5.1% vs. consensus 5.1%
    * * * * *



    10:31 DOE reports crude oil inventories +2.1M barrels vs. expectations (800K) barrels
    Gasoline inventories reported 1.8M barrels vs. consensus 0 barrels (unchanged). Distillate inventories reported +600K barrels vs. consensus (1.125M) barrels. February crude is trading lower in initial reaction to the data.

    The John Brimelow Report


    More on ECB


    Wednesday, Dec 22, 2004


    Indian ex-duty premiums: AM $8.57, PM $8.17, with world gold at $441.25 and $442.25. Very ample for legal imports.


    Over the balance of the year, not only will most Futures markets be closed, but many refineries will also be shut down. This will make the behavior of the physical premium market particularly interesting.


    Japan was again comatose (and is closed tomorrow). On volume equal to only 9,802 Comex, open interest dropped 352 Comex. The active contract rose 13 yen and world gold was up 15c from NY. (NY yesterday traded 26,104 contracts. Open interest fell 1,467 lots.)


    Reuters reports Japan imported 6.23 tonnes in November. UBS commented:


    "Year to date imports into Japan have increased by more than 80% compared to 2001 and 2003 …We expect strong demand out of Japan early in 2005."


    Base metals again put in a lively performance today, with aluminum reaching a 9 ½ year high. Funds are still operational: but intimidated in the gold market.


    HSBC yesterday produced an interesting comment:


    "One potential seller that should be included in the list of potential sellers is the ECB itself. At the beginning of November the wording of the weekly financial statement from the ECB was changed to remove the word " national" from the words "sale by a national central bank of the eurosystem". This was a deliberate change so that the ECB itself could sell gold if it so desired. Also worth noting, is that because of the increase in the value of gold over recent years and the decline in the value of the dollar, gold now actually accounts for 22% of the total ECB reserves, considerably more than the 15% benchmark. With ECB gold reserves of 767t, moving back to the 15% benchmark could involve the sale of up to 241t of gold."


    Professional portfolio managers might find the concept of automatically selling strength odd.


    JB

    Something radical has to occur here. This “steady as she goes” routine is a disaster and worsening by the month. Before the war started I ranted that Iraq would be a nightmare – that little the Administration was telling the American people made much sense. Cost me a fair amount of business back then as so many gold folks are conservatives. One of my best friends and a 6 year Café member could not have disagreed with me more too. Well, the tide has changed. 68% of Americans today said the war is not worth the cost, according to an MSNBC poll.


    The Mosul tragedy is a wake up call to the American public. We have another Vietnam or Lebanon on our hands, except much worse. For Iraq to end badly (can’t see how it cannot) could lead to further chaos in the Middle East.


    Why go into this in such detail in today’s MIDAS? Because yesterday I watched in bewilderment as the US stock market zoomed higher after the Mosul news hit. Meanwhile, gold rose to over $443 in Asia this morning and the AM Fix was $442.70 due to strong physical market demand. However, the panicky Gold Cartel takes it down for the day in New York even with the euro up .17. Yet the DOW, which comes in unchanged, then manages to rise another 50 on top of yesterday’s 95 point gain. All this while CNN and MSNBC devote 80% of their morning TV coverage to the Mosul massacre. For me it was a suspension of reality and a flight to denial over the tsunami waiting to hit our financial markets.


    So be it! For now. US financial markets are headed for some serious convulsions next year. Reality will hit home as we sail into January and beyond. The price of gold is going to go ballistic, and not only in dollar terms. It is set to blow through $500 in our currency terms and also explode in most foreign currencies. This is a time to load the boat on the gold/silver train before it streaks out of the station.


    The dollar closed unchanged, while the euro rose to .25 to 134. It is now 1 and change from making a new high, while gold is almost $16 off its high. Gold’s performance in foreign currency terms continues to worsen.


    The gold open interest fell 1467 contracts to 319,955.


    Silver saw some fund selling, perhaps a few are even going short. The silver open interest dropped 650 contracts to 98,246.

    December 22 – Gold $440 down $1.20 – Silver $6.78 down 9 cents


    Surreal


    "Let no pleasure tempt thee, no profit allure thee, no ambition corrupt thee, no example sway thee, no persuasion move thee to do anything which thou knowest to be evil; so thou shalt live jollily, for a good conscience is a continual Christmas." --Benjamin Franklin


    Surreal. That was about all I could think of watching the markets today. Two significant market events have occurred the past few days. Not only have they not had a major impact like one might expect, the markets have gone in the opposite direction than what seems rational to me.


    The first was the momentous decision by the Germans not to sell their gold, save some 8 tonnes for gold coin purposes. The ripple effect from their in your face snub to The Gold Cartel will be significant as time goes by. It is a watershed event. The fact that gold is sinking after this news, even as the euro has rallied a fair amount, is an indication just how important this news really is. The Gold Cartel is reeling behind the scenes while they soften the gold price as they try to figure out what to do next.


    The second is the Iraq War fiasco that President Bush has our country mired in. He couldn’t wait a few more months to gain the support of other countries. He didn’t listen to many generals who said we needed more troops. He fired people who dared say the war would cost for more than the projections of the neo-cons. The paramount reason he gave to the American people for going to war – imminent threat from Iraqi weapons of mass destruction - was bogus, etc.


    So now here we are 1 ½ years after "the war ended" and we have the second worst day for US fatalities since the war started. This is a complete fiasco with no end in sight. Seems to me the US must pull out, a catastrophe, however it will spare more needless deaths of brave US soldiers. Or, go all out like Colin Powell thought in the beginning. Use massive force to attempt to win the day. Of course, the cost will be prohibitive and could dramatically affect our financial markets very negatively next year. To win the day Americans must accept a significant lowering of our standard of living so we can bring democracy to Iraq. To have a Shiite Mullah win the democratic vote. What a joke! We supported Iraq in the 80’s to counter Iran’s influence in the region. Now we are going all out to foster an election which could very likely bring Iraq and Iran closer together to some degree. No wonder the south of Iraq is quiet. They are waiting to take power and rule the country.

    DJ FOCUS: Buba 8-Ton Gold Sale Neutral To Positive For Mkt


    By Elisabeth Behrmann
    Of DOW JONES NEWSWIRES


    LONDON (Dow JONES)--The announcement by the Deutsche Bundesbank that it will sell only 8 metric tons of gold instead of the expected 120 tons is neutral to mildly positive for the market, analysts said Monday.


    The renewed European Central Banks Agreement, known as CBGA, limits gold sales by its 15 signatories to 2,500 tons between September 2004 and 2009. The Bundesbank has an option to sell a total of 600 tons, or 120 tons per year.


    The Bundesbank will transfer its remaining option to sell 112 tons to other signatories.


    Market commentators are divided whether the announcement will mean CBGA gold sales will fall short of the 2,500-ton quota, which would be supportive to the market.


    So far, of the 500 tons of gold that can be sold this year, only around 300 tons are accounted for.


    "It's difficult to see how to get up to 2,500 tons of sales without all the three big possible sellers," HSBC precious metals analyst Alan Williamson said.


    France, Germany and Italy are the three main possible sellers during the renewed CBGA, but the Bank of Italy has so far ruled out sales from its reserves.


    "Even if they (the Bundesbank) say that other central banks will sell their quota, if the Bundesbank remains a non-seller then the arithmetic makes it look even less likely that the full 2,500 ton will be sold - and this will be positive," UBS precious metals analyst John Reade said.


    Switzerland will finish its gold sale program in March with remaining 130 (0) tons to sell, France should sell between 100-120 tons until September, while Portugal is estimated to sell more than 20 tons, Austria less than 20 tons and Germany 8 tons.


    "If Central Banks undershoot their target one year, they'll overshoot the next, which would have a destabilizing effect. Why increase the quota to 2,500 tons and then not use it? During the first agreement banks used the whole quota," Mitsui's Andy Smith said. The first CBGA ran from 1999-2004.


    France is the most likely candidate to take up the Bundesbank's relegated sale option, Societe Generale precious metals analyst Stephen Briggs said.


    "France has already started to sell gold in October, before they made a statement they would," he said. Other candidates include Spain or Greece, another analyst said.


    In November, Bank of France Governor Christian Noyer said the bank would sell 500 to 600 tons of its gold reserves over the next five years.


    The French central bank sold 8.1 tons of gold during October, according to World Gold Council data.


    The decision by the Bundesbank to use only a smidgen of its first-year quota has been interpreted as a sign of a struggle between Germany's Finance Ministry and the bank, while news reports have also outlined an internal disagreement among the bank's board members. President Axel Weber has been reported as wanting to start gold sales during 2004, but six out of eight Bundesbank board members didn't agree.


    There is controversy over how the proceeds of the sale will be used.


    In an interview with the Bild am Sonntag newspaper, Finance Minister Hans Eichel said the sale of 120 tons of gold would likely yield EUR1 billion. That money could be used to plug the government budget deficit, which has exceeded European Union limits for three straight years.


    However, the bank is said to be leaning towards investing proceeds from the sale of the 8 tons into interest-bearing securities and to use the gains for educational and research projects.


    The Bundesbank holds 3,340 tons of gold reserves.


    -By Elisabeth Behrmann, Dow Jones Newswires; (4420) 7842 9412;
    elisabeth.behrmann@dowjones.com

    An impetus for the gold shares today:


    7:30
    Given the recent pull-back in the price of gold, valuations have declined. UBS continues to see a strengthening gold price in 2005 with a $460/ozaverage in Q405. ABX, PDG, NEM, KGC, BVN, and GSS are upgraded to buyfrom neutral. EGO is upped to neutral from reduce.
    * * * * *
    The gold shares at least showed some signs of life. The XAU gained 1.22 to 99.99, while the moribund HUI rose 2.34 to 216.22. The HUI must clear 220 to get the gold show on the road again.


    GATA BE IN IT TO WIN IT!


    MIDAS

    GATA’s Wistar Holt with some thoughts on the gold shares:


    Bill,
    I’d like to make a personal observation on the theory that much of the excessive December decline in the gold shares is tax-loss selling. For years, going back to the early 1980’s I used to participate in this late December strategy of purchasing beaten-down, oversold stocks which had been "dumped" in the last few weeks of the year to establish a tax loss. I started purchasing these stocks in the last 5-7 days of the year, presuming that by then, most of the selling pressure had been completed. Some of the returns from a bounce back into the first 2 weeks of the new year were incredible. Many times we saw gains of 20-50% in a matter of a couple of weeks. Theoretically, this was merely a return to equilibrium, from an event driven, inefficiently oversold condition.


    This strategy began to lose some of its effectiveness when the Wall Street brokerage firms caught on, and began to issue their lists of "fallen angles" or other stupid, catchy names. Some sellers also caught on; selling their losers earlier (sometimes even in November when prices were better while the selling herd was not exiting all at once). Then, if they so desired, they could repurchase the losers 31 days later (avoid wash sale) when the selling pressure was alleviated and prices were probably bottoming at year end.


    Now, here is my point. If this share pressure is primarily tax-related selling, then this group should begin a strong rally from the last week of the year into the first two weeks of 2005, irrespective of what gold does over the same period. Many investors still take advantage of these oversold opportunities at year end. Perhaps the excess pressure is tax-selling; given the fact that we had such a sharp decline in gold recently, whereby many shareholders may have suddenly decided to sell due to that decline. Further evidence of this effect may be indicated by the recent share decline/underperformance, even on upward days for gold.


    If we fail to see a significant snapback in the shares during the final week of the year and into the first two weeks of 2005, then I will suspect that the majority of the selling is primarily related to the cartel’s attempt to "pile on" the overall pressure. If that is the case, then we probably won’t see a rally in the shares until we have some form of breakout in the metal, and the cartel throws in the towel in the share "capping."


    Regards,
    Wistar