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mamboni
14th May 2013, 06:35 PM
mamboni comments: the last time the US banks were this low net short gold was in mid 2008, a few weeks before the massive gold price bull run to $1900 commenced. The banks went long in a big way bringing the net short position to near zero. Well folks, they have done it again with the most recent April ambush on gold, both by covering a massive 84% of their shorts and adding on enormous long contracts. On top of this, gold is sitting in the mid $1400s after a very long 20 month consolidation and ripe for a big move. This chart is screaming massive breakout in gold to the upside. While the future is impossible to predict, such a move by gold would have so many fundamentals at it's proverbial back (i.e. ZIRP, NIRP, Cypress, QE, Yen devaluation, Japanese Bond Market selloff etc.). One thing seems clear: the big US banks are not anticipating any drop in the gold price. As always, do your own due diligence. I am an unabashed gold bull:


U.S. Banks Buy Gold Futures in Dramatic Position Change

HOUSTON – We thought we would share with our readership an important change in the positioning of large U.S. banks in the monthly futures-only Bank Participation Report (http://www.cftc.gov/MarketReports/BankParticipationReports/index.htm)(BPR) issued by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC). The most recent report was published Friday, May 10 for positions as of the close on Tuesday, May 7.


The main reason we are going to the trouble of doing this short report is that there is a surprising dearth of accurate information about the new data available on the Web.

One of our members forwarded to us some coverage by others which we found utterly useless and inaccurate (showing a preconceived bias on the part of the author), so perhaps this report will provide some clarity for those who closely follow the CFTC commitments of traders reports as well as the positioning of banks in futures.


U.S. Banks Net Shorts Fall to Lowest Since Summer, 2008


Let’s start this review with our comments shared with GGR Subscribers on Sunday, May 12. After mentioning that the combined commercial traders – the Big Hedgers, which includes the U.S. banks in the Legacy COT reports – had reduced their collective net short positioning for gold to the lowest since the 2008 panic and at a “very fast pace,” we said:




“An aggressive pace of LCNS reduction with none more aggressive than U.S. banks. The Bank Participation Report (not to be confused with the weekly Legacy COT report, which is separate) shows that over the past month U.S. banks covered or offset a whopping 24,855 (60%) of their net shorts (from 41,666 to just 16,781 contracts net short). The number of U.S. banks reporting falls below 4, a tell. We have not seen the U.S. banks show so low a net short position since they briefly went slightly net long in the summer of 2008 during the panic.”



So in just one month, as gold fell a net $123.45 or 7.8% (from $1,575.67 on April 2 to $1,452.22 May 7), U.S. banks covered or offset 60% of their net short bets on gold, down to an extremely small 16,781 contracts net short. We have to go all the way back to the June 3, 2008 BPR to find a time when the U.S. banks, including bullion banks, showed a lower number of net short bets held.
In fact, in that June 2008 report the U.S. banks were actually net long gold then by 5,381 lots. (But as the graph below clearly shows they would not stay net long. By the next monthly report in July they had put on an amazing 82,228 contracts net short in just one month.)

Below is a graph showing the nominal net short positioning reported by U.S. banks to show it visually.


http://treo.typepad.com/.a/6a0120a6002285970c01910221c87c970c-500wi
(http://treo.typepad.com/.a/6a0120a6002285970c01910221c87c970c-popup)

Interestingly, the U.S. banks net short positioning did not decline because they were reducing their short bets. Instead, 21,653 contracts of the change is attributable to the banks adding long contracts to their positioning for just this past month. They were not dumping their short contracts so much as adding longs in other words.

In just the five reporting months since December 4, 2012 as gold declined a net $245.10 or 14.4%, U.S. banks' net shorts fell from 106,393 to 16,781, a plunge of 89,612 lots or a whopping 84.2%.

The net effect is clear to see in the graph above on a nominal basis. As gold fell down to test the $1,300s U.S. banks very strongly reduced their collective net short positioning and came within a whisker of becoming actually net long for the first time since the 2008 panic.

To standardize the results and show that there are no material anomalies in the data above, we compare the U.S. banks' nominal net position with the total COMEX open interest in the graph below. From December 4 to last Tuesday, May 7, as gold fell from near $1,700 to as low as $1,321 before settling at $1,452, the U.S. banks’ net short positioning fell from a significant 24.5% to a miniscule 3.8% of all COMEX contracts open .


http://treo.typepad.com/.a/6a0120a6002285970c01901c2bed05970b-500wi
(http://treo.typepad.com/.a/6a0120a6002285970c01901c2bed05970b-popup)

Clearly the U.S. banks, presumably including U.S. bullion banks, are not, that's not, positioning as though they believe there is a great deal more downside left in gold futures.


If they did or do believe that gold could probe even lower than the $1,320s, they are not positioning for it in COMEX futures. That does not necessarily mean they are "right," but it is a window into how the largest, best funded and presumably the best informed traders of gold futures on the planet - the U.S. banks - are positioning, both for their own book and for their clients.*


It is rare to see the U.S. banks put on 21,000 or more long contracts in a month.** We have to believe that the U.S. banks would not have done that unless they meant to reduce their collective net short positioning in a relative hurry.
(A long contract benefits if prices rise. A short contract benefits if prices fall.)


* The U.S. bullion banks trade for their own account and for clients, which include a broad cross section of businesses in the gold trade (large bullion dealers, large holders of physical metal, jewelry merchants and manufacturers, producers, some refiners, bullion management firms and other middlemen, etc.).


** This is the largest increase in our records going back to 2006. Before this report the largest one month increase in U.S. bank longs was with the September 2, 2008 report, when the U.S. banks reported adding 17,567 lots with gold then about $805. By the following report, on October 7, gold had moved 9% higher to the $880s.

(Source for data CFTC for bank positioning, Cash Market for gold, GGR.)


http://www.gotgoldreport.com/2013/05/us-banks-buy-gold-futures-in-dramat... (http://www.gotgoldreport.com/2013/05/us-banks-buy-gold-futures-in-dramatic-position-change.html)

osoab
14th May 2013, 07:04 PM
I still think it goes lower through the summer. Nothing stopping the banks from selling their longs with a 50+ upside and crashing the market once again.

gunDriller
16th May 2013, 08:00 AM
I still think it goes lower through the summer. Nothing stopping the banks from selling their longs with a 50+ upside and crashing the market once again.

what does 50+ upside mean ? greater than 50% chance of going up ?

Steal
18th May 2013, 05:13 PM
I still think it goes lower through the summer. Nothing stopping the banks from selling their longs with a 50+ upside and crashing the market once again.
my thoughts also. I say couple more months of equity moonshot as everyone not wanting to miss out continue to pile in leaving minimal corrections to 'get on da train' 15% drop will drag metals with it for sure.

mamboni
18th May 2013, 08:12 PM
This was just posted at ZH. It is an excellent summary of the hard facts concerning the monetary system, debt, leverage, the coming big reset and YOU:

Harlequin001 (http://gold-silver.us/users/harlequin001) http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/pictures/picture-20175.jpg (http://gold-silver.us/users/harlequin001)




I've said this before and I'll say it again. Ask yourself this, if we live in a world where any central bank can print enough new money to buy all the worlds' gold, why isn't it constantly being shipped from one country to another at ever increasing prices? Why are China and Russia constrained to adding to their reserves FROM MINIMG SUPPLIES, and why will it take 7 years to repatriate one 10th of Germany's gold to the Bundesbank?


The answer is that gold is still, and has been for 50 years now the only 'commodity' that isn't for sale FOR ANY AMOUNT OF PAPER MONEY in the central banking system.

Why is that?

The answer is IMO because TPTB after WWII required collateral to make loans to rebuild a devastated Germany and Europe post war when there was no effective collateral other than gold, and that wass in the US and UK. They needed to create new collateral to fund the rebuild, fast, and that collateral was debt. It was a requirement. They've done this before, they know how this ends, they knew how this would end back then. It ends in both inflation and default, and when it does the only countries with gold will still be the post WWII powers i.e England and the US. Every other country including Asia knows that when the default finally comes the asset side of their now somewhat T Bill bloated balance sheets will implode, counterparty risk will be 100% and they will have no gold for their currency.
Try as they might there is no way the Fed or the BoE will allow any central bank to take gold paid for in post war fiat hence China and Russia scrabbling for mining supply and Germany's problem in repatriating its gold. There remains not one central bank not capable of placing a 400 tonne long to counter the April 12th short if they needed gold to be stable for their reserves, yet they didn't and still don't. This is because they don't have any real gold despite what is supposedly stored by the Fed and BoE. The Central Bank Agreements on Gold were a paper exercise, which means that Asian and European economies continued existence is still dependent on the USD, and they know it. This ends in default. That's when the Fed and BoE take back their gold from JPM and HSBC et al and every body else gets to eat the $700 Trillion credit loss that no one can see coming. We already know how this ends. China and Russia have until then to accumulate as much phys as they can before it's too late, because central banks aren't selling it at any price in paper. If they don't mine it they have no choice but to keep teh party going.

If you want to go invest in the stock market go knock yourself out, I'm sure when push comes to shove you will find plenty of very tall fiat paid for buildings to jump off, and remember freefalls's cool till it's not, as many stock markets are about to find out...

mamboni
18th May 2013, 08:28 PM
We are all Weimar Germans now. The hyperinflation phase is now restarting with a vengeance, in Japan. It will visit us in good time.


http://usactionnews.com/main/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/gold_price_vs_German_mark_1919_1923.jpg

Horn
19th May 2013, 12:40 AM
Sure they'll let it fly as fast and as high it can at some point, so they can crash it again.

Then another round of retirees show up from regional banks when those get consolidated in Federal Walmart Credit Centers.

Silver is Gold's only saviour.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YIbYCOiETx0

Horn
19th May 2013, 07:20 PM
We are all Weimar Germans now. The hyperinflation phase is now restarting with a vengeance, in Japan. It will visit us in good time.




http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=34ag4nkSh7Q