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BULL IN BEAR'S SKIN?
by Antal E.
Fekete,
Professor Emeritus,
Memorial University of Newfoundland
May 4, 2006
Dear
Mr. Northwest:
Thank
you for asking the provocative question whether the current bull
market in gold is stage-produced by the powers-that-be in order to
divert attention from the deliberate devaluation of all
currencies. Your letter has given me an opportunity to sort out my
own thoughts on the subject. Here is the result.
Supply
and demand
My
analysis of the gold and silver market is very different from the
conventional. I am a monetary scientist. Supply and demand
equilibrium analysis means nothing to me. For a monetary metal
both supply and demand are undefinable. There is no way to
quantify speculative supply, still less demand. Yet without it the
gold market is like Hamlet without the prince, to borrow a
phrase from Samuelson.
Speculators
can jump back and forth between the long and the short side of the
market at a moment’s notice, and in case of monetary
disturbances they do. If you insist on using these concepts, the
most you can say is that both the supply of and the demand for the
monetary metal or its paper substitutes are infinite. Therefore
the price can approach any conceivable figure, including infinity
for the metal, zero for the paper substitutes. Of course, the
banks and the government want to maintain the myth that futures
markets provide a reliable link between the two. The fact remains,
however, that this link is tenuous and illusory.
It
follows that any scientific analysis of the gold market must
sidestep concepts such as supply, demand, equilibrium price and
replace them with concepts such as asked price, bid price, spread,
basis, contango, backwardation.
Corner
and short squeeze
The
literature on corners is scanty. Yet it is the possibility of
corners and short squeezes that must be analyzed if we want to
understand the present situation. The facts are as follows. While
short squeezes are common, true corners are exceedingly rare. So
much so that some authors flatly deny that successful corners are
possible save under siege or blockade. By a corner I mean the
attempt of longs in a commodity exchange to prevent the shorts
from making good on their contractual obligations by forestalling
supply. However, the shorts are going to move heaven and earth to
get supplies to the market in time for delivery. The higher the
longs have bid the price, the greater the incentive for the shorts
to deliver. If we examine the historical corners in the Chicago
wheat pit we shall see that every one of them was a short squeeze
that fell short of being a successful corner. The shorts used
every available means of conveyance from dinghies to triremes,
from barrows to lorries to move supplies from distant places to
the appointed elevators in time.
Contrary
to popular beliefs, the shorts are not stupid. Nor are they
suicidal. They are responsible businessmen well able to calculate,
including calculation of the cost of transportation by the fastest
conveyances available such as supersonic aircraft if need be to
carry supplies half-way around the globe. Whenever they sell
short, they are not acting on impulse. They act on cold facts.
They know full well that the futures markets fail to be symmetric.
They know that there is a built-in bias favoring the longs at the
expense of the bears: the risk shouldered by the former is limited
(as the price cannot fall below zero) while that shouldered by the
latter is unlimited (as the price can theoretically go to
infinity). Whereas an individual short seller might miscalculate,
it is virtually impossible that the shorts collectively would.
Are
the shorts really naked?
It
is a fatal mistake to underestimate your opponents, in this case
the short sellers in precious metals, arguably the smartest lot on
earth. They know how to do what Aristotle and latter-day
economists have said was impossible: to make gold beget gold. I
don’t for a moment give credence to the fable that the
commercials are selling short naked. Most of their short position
is hedged most of the time, if not directly by metal in their
possession, then certainly indirectly by metal in the possession
of the principals, i.e., for whom they act as a man of straw. The
commercials are agents. They act on behalf of their customers, be
they wealthy individuals who want to sell call options or futures
on their gold hoard anonymously, or banks and governments that do
not want you to find out what they are up to. The fact is that
selling covered calls and puts is a more efficient way for a bull
to husband his resources than buying gold and sitting on it.
Consider
the hypothetical scenario that the government of Israel wants
unobtrusively accumulate gold. Or, to furnish an example of a more
populous country, let’s assume that the government of China
wants unobtrusively to accumulate silver in any conceivable
amounts. The task is cut out for both countries. They have
respectable hoards to begin with. Gold is the most portable form
of wealth and the most frequently mentioned word in the Bible
after God. China has been on a silver standard since time
immemorial and did not participate in the silver-demonetization
farce of the 19th century. The best course of action
for a government wanting to accumulate gold or silver is to
mislead the market by fomenting the bearish case. The net short
position in gold represents its stake that it is willing to risk
in an effort to get more gold and silver through market
manipulation. In other words, the net short position is only
apparent, a red herring to throw gold bugs off the scent. It is
the tip of the iceberg that you can see and touch. What you
don’t see and can’t touch is the bulk of the iceberg
submerged: the huge physical gold and silver hoards that the owner
wants to increase further by hook or crook. It can be done by
hiring agents in the commodity pits. The commercials sell the
metals short in excess of visible supplies, acting on behalf of
their faceless principals. They sell more gold than the future
output of the mines going out five years. They sell more silver
than the total inventory held in exchange warehouses. The longs
take the bait eagerly. They buy and hold in the hope that the
shorts are overextended and will not be able to deliver. The point
is that this is exactly what the shorts want them to believe.
It
is easy to predict what will happen in such a situation. The longs
are sitting ducks and the shorts keep preying on them. They raid
them periodically so that, after the shake-out, they can pick up
gold and silver dropped by weak hands. Not only do they buy back
what they have sold short as bait; they pick up a lot more. It is
a wolf in sheep’s skin or, if you like, a bull in bear’s skin.
The name of the game is to mislead the public and induce it to
give up monetary metals for a pottage of lentils. I am not putting
this forth as a thesis. It can never be proved or disproved. It is
merely a hypothesis more plausible than the one suggesting that
the shorts are as stupid as they are suicidal.
Ted
Butler believes that mountains of surplus silver, remnants of
silver demonetization six score years and fifteen ago, that were
still around in 1945, have long since been dissipated and
“consumed”. Of course, the shorts welcome such beliefs and
help foster them by all means. Aided by this myth they accumulate
still more silver by fleecing the naive and overconfident longs
who are cocksure that they are facing naked shorts in the pit.
Meanwhile the watchdog agencies know that physical silver exists
and can be delivered if necessary. One should not be so sardonic
as to think that he was the only one to discover that silver was
dirt cheap at $3. The “wolf pack” has also discovered it and
started accumulating, albeit very, very quietly. Theirs is quite
different from Butler’s “buy and sit” strategy. They are not
waiting for the miracle of silver in four digits to happen. They
do something in order to start drawing benefits from their
investment immediately. From their vantage point the longer the
price rise is stretched out, the better. Why? Because they know
something that Butler apparently doesn’t: how to make silver
yield an income provided that you can hide it under a bushel.
There
is no need to cry “foul play”. It will do nicely if you credit
the shorts with more wits than you assign to the longs.
Short
covering and profit taking
Granted
that the shorts are bluffing to tease, taunt, and bait the bulls,
it is clear that at one point short selling must become
counter-productive. Large bait tickles small fish. When it does,
the shorts pull in their nets. They cover. But the fact stands out
that it is they, the shorts who call the shots even though their
paper losses appear to be staggering, not the longs. Unknown to
the public, these losses are far surpassed by gains on physical
gold that the shorts have been amassing clandestinely at the
expense of the longs for half a century. When the shorts pull the
plug and cover their position, the longs are jubilant amidst cries
of “cornered rats”. Yet all the longs can show for their
effort is paper gold, while the shorts control an increasing slice
of physical pie. The price of paper gold is destined to go to
zero; that of physical to infinity. Who is fooling whom?
The
shorts realize that in any bull market there is bound to be
periodic profit-taking. They don’t have to induce one. It will
happen on its own accord. It is spontaneous and unpredictable.
While it scares the daylight out of the longs; it is picnic for
the shorts. It provides a reliable steady income for them, one
that the longs sorely miss. Moreover, the shorts tend to sell into
strength and buy into weakness. This is their strength. The longs
typically buy into strength and sell into weakness. This is their
weakness.
Backwardation
and basis
Instead
of the COT reports Butler should concentrate on such direct
indicators as backwardation and basis. Backwardation is the market
phenomenon whereby nearby futures are selling at a premium over
the more distant. The normal condition for monetary metals is the
opposite, contango, indicating that supply is plentiful.
Backwardation in monetary metals is a foolproof indicator that
supplies are getting tight. Basis is the name for the spread
between the nearby futures price and the spot price. Its shrinking
reveals that short selling is becoming counter-productive so that
the shorts may be getting ready to cover. Conversely, the widening
of the basis tells you that shortages may soon end the shorts are
likely to start selling once more. Butler will write a hundred
pages about the COT reports while writing half a sentence about
backwardation. As far as I can tell, he has never written even a
quarter of a sentence about the basis, in spite of a challenge I
issued to him privately two years ago. Perhaps he has never got
around to take a refresher course, so busy he was poring over
reams of COT reports. Be that as it may, the basis is a most
sensitive market indicator. When negative, it is a red-hot alarm
indicating that offers to sell gold are drying up fast, and may be
withdrawn at any time. Please don’t take me wrong. I am not
against studying COT reports. All information is useful if you
know how to interpret it intelligently. But it is not a very
intelligent construction to put on the COT reports to assume that
the bulk of the short position of the big commercials is naked.
Having
said this, I must credit Butler for advocating the ownership of metal
fully paid for as against futures positions or ownership of
unallocated metal in public warehouses. He also admits the possibility
that the “wolf-pack” may engineer another sell-off even after
having suffered horrendous paper losses during the latest run-up of
the price.
Can
depression be averted?
Where
does all this leave us? The short-covering and profit-taking
charade will continue, possibly for several years to come. There
will be no disorderly cut-and-run by the shorts and no meteoric
rise in the price. Spectacular rises, yes. But they will be
followed by equally spectacular and sometimes protracted
corrections testing the stamina, staying power, and intestinal
fortitude of the longs. Volatility will increase faster than the
moving averages. Exchange rules may be changed unilaterally
favoring the shorts, prejudicial to the longs.
Obituaries
of the dollar are a bit premature. We cannot rule out the
possibility that policy-makers favor a controlled devaluation of
the dollar in terms of gold. By now they must realize that
bilateral devaluations against selected currencies will never
work. They would provoke trade wars and competitive currency
devaluations. By contrast, a 1979-80 style devaluation of all
currencies against gold should be acceptable to all governments,
even though the outcome would be the same. The dollar would be
devalued against other currencies at various rates, higher for the
yen, less for the euro, and least for the renminbi. The trading
partners of the U.S. would tolerate that without retaliating with
discriminating tariffs and quotas.
You
see, my position is close to your own. Yes, as you say, there is
an iceberg of gold and silver which is unseen that never enters
the market. Yes, the watchdog agencies know this (as well as the
identity of the principals of the short sellers who fool the
market in posing and parading naked while in full armor, in a
reversal of Andersen’s amusing tale) but they are sworn to
secrecy. And yes, it is not impossible that this bull market in
gold is stage-produced in order to devalue all currencies
deliberately without the policy-makers making a scape-goat of
themselves. The purpose of the exercise? Why, it is to get rid of
the debt-incubus short of deflation, defaults, and depression.
Come to think of it, a measured devaluation of all currencies
against gold is the only hope to avoid an enormously destructive
and protracted depression of the world economy that would be
triggered by the sudden toppling of the Debt Tower of Babel. A
planned melt-down, well-entombed inside of a golden sarcophagus,
is the preferred way to go.
What
if I am wrong and policy-makers are getting more band-aid out of
the medicine cabinet to patch up the disintegrating international
monetary system? In that case may God help us survive the coming
Armageddon.
Yours,
etc.
A.
E. F.
May 4, 2006.

© 2006 Antal
E. Fekete
Professor Emeritus, Memorial University of Newfoundland
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