PDA

View Full Version : Is the start of a physical squeeze here?



Steal
18th June 2010, 08:52 AM
http://truthingold.blogspot.com/2010...arting-to.html

Friday, June 18, 2010
Silver: Is A Physical Squeeze Starting To Bubble Up?


The Comex had two large silver withdrawals this week. Yesterday's warehouse stock report showed 1.2mm ounces were removed, 900k of it from the "eligible" inventory, which is the investor inventory being "safekept" at Comex depositories but not available to be delivered. 480k of that 900k was removed from Scotia. With all the discussion and unrefuted (by Scotia) accusations about Scotia's depository safekeeping methodologies, it wouldn't surprise me to see even more gold and silver going forward being taken out of Scotia's customer inventory.

But here's an even more glaring issue: as of last Friday, the net commercial short position in silver, as per the COT report, was 55,329 contracts. At 5,000 ozs/contract, that's 276,645,000 ounces of silver sold short by the big bullion banks (Mostly JP Morgan, HSBC and BNS - and mostly JPM at that). What's the problem? The total silver inventory being reported by the Comex is 118 million ounces. But of that, 66 million is customer inventory not available for delivery, leaving 52 million ounces of silver that can be delivered vs. 276 million of short paper silver.

Let's break it down to just July silver. The July silver open interest is 49,327, which means half of that, or roughly 24.6k contracts are short. That's 123 million ounces of silver vs. the 52 million available for delivery. See the problem?

A reader related to me yesterday that he had a silver bar delivery problem with the Comex about three months ago that had to be resolved using his broker's lawyer. Our fund has experienced several delays in getting silver delivered from the Comex - with HSBC as the counterparty - over the past year. This includes last year, when our April silver was not delivered until June 20th (7 weeks past contractual last delivery day).

Furthermore, I know that my friend who is a bullion trader here in Denver is having a hard time sourcing any kind of real supply of silver bullion on the "bid side" of the market, which means he's having a hard time finding retail sellers in any kind of size AND his buyers want silver right now. He was definitely postured as a much better buyer and was beating me up to sell him some silver eagles.

That the physical market in gold and silver is getting tight is not new news. But the above withdrawals from the Comex customer silver inventories this week, in the context of the anectdotal events as described above, can only lead one to believe that an enormous amount of pressure is being created by the trend of big investors demanding physical delivery into private depositories that are trustworthy and not connected to the bullion banks, who are likely leasing out some portion of the bullion in their depositories.

One more interesting development has to do with scrap supplies of gold. In the past, when gold breaks out to new highs, European bullion dealers report the emergence of a large supplies of scrap selling that hits the market. Last January (2009) the flow of scrap into the market was credited with causing the subsequent pullback in price. So far in this latest move, very little scrap supply is being reported.

GATA has maintained for over 11 years that eventually the physical market demand would completely overwhelm the ability of the paper short interest to satisfy delivery demands. I would argue that the market is starting to transition into that process and it will lead to much higher prices. In fact, I believe all but the most knowledgeable gold investors will be stunned by coming price movements. What will be even more shocking to many is the premium over spot that the market will pay for deliverable physical bullion.
Posted by Dave in Denver at 7:37 AM

Carbon
18th June 2010, 09:08 AM
The July silver open interest is 49,327, which means half of that, or roughly 24.6k contracts are short. That's 123 million ounces of silver vs. the 52 million available for delivery. See the problem?



http://www.thedomesticsoundscape.com/site-images/musical-chairs.jpg

Defender
20th June 2010, 03:35 AM
Funny. But in reality, there are far fewer chairs than that.





The July silver open interest is 49,327, which means half of that, or roughly 24.6k contracts are short. That's 123 million ounces of silver vs. the 52 million available for delivery. See the problem?



http://www.thedomesticsoundscape.com/site-images/musical-chairs.jpg

Ragnarok
22nd June 2010, 06:32 PM
I think yes, and it's long overdue.
R. ;D

the riot act
22nd June 2010, 06:44 PM
I might break even on my 23$ SAE's yet.

JohnQPublic
22nd June 2010, 06:56 PM
As I said on another thread, "Oh, oh,... someone needs a little short covering!" ;D

skidmark
22nd June 2010, 10:10 PM
Silver Leaving the Comex As Investors Want to Get Physical


Dave from Denver reports that:

"On Friday 516,522 ounces of silver were withdrawn from the Comex from Brinks.

Yesterday another 1.6 million ounces were withdrawn from Brink's and HSBC. It all came from the "eligible" category, which is the investor silver being kept at the Comex. This means it wasn't the banks and SLV playing a "shell game" with their "fractional" silver holdings. This was real stuff leaving and going into real hands off-Comex.

This is a lot of silver leaving the Comex and at least the silver leaving HSBC is motivated investors taking physical delivery.

In the context of gold/silver holding up as well as it has so far this week (silver contract roll, options expiry Thurs, 2-day FOMC meeting), it would seem that the demand for actual physical delivery of gold/silver maybe starting to overwhelm the cartel."

Posted by Jesse at 3:28 PM
Category: silver


http://jessescrossroadscafe.blogspot.com/

Saul Mine
22nd June 2010, 10:51 PM
I might break even on my 23$ SAE's yet.


Don't feel too bad. In March 2008 I sold 320 oz of silver at an average of $25 per ounce. Spot peaked at $21.30 in that period. Those buyers are still waiting to break even!