|
A news item was quietly reported - in Japan of all places - back on March
3, 2006 which I strongly feel is of the utmost importance. This piece involved
a change in the way things are reported on the Tokyo Commodities Exchange [TOCOM].
The changes are to take effect as of April 1, 2006 - no fooling.
Right from the Reuters News release,
TOKYO, March 3 (Reuters) - The Tokyo Commodity Exchange hopes to
attract more foreigners and a wider range of investors, including institutions,
with plans to bolster players' anonymity and list new products, a senior
exchange official said on Friday. TOCOM, Japan's top commodity exchange,
aims to discontinue its practice of disclosing daily outstanding positions
for each member starting early in the next business year, which begins in
April.
This is important and relevant because - like the Fed's discontinuance of
M3 Money Supply Reporting - it signifies the removal of another measure of
transparency that promotes/ensures accountability on the part of all players
in the financial system.
The soon to take effect changes on the TOCOM will bring that exchange more
in line with the opacity that has long been exhibited by New York's COMEX [affectionately
known and referred to by insiders and critics as the CRIMEX]
- where open interest data are clumsily aggregated and reported to the public
close to one week in arrears via the COT
Report.
It says here, that the reason being offered [that of anonymity and to attract
business] is as credible as the Fed's claim that ceasing M3 Money Supply reporting
later this month was designed to "save
money." The reality, I'm afraid, is making the actions of TOCOM participants "stealthy" more
likely has its roots in the factual account outlined below:
Appearances vs. Reality
The activities of Goldman Sachs "shorting gold" on TOCOM was first brought
to my attention by Adrian Douglas via Bill Murphy's daily Midas commentary
at Lemetropolecafe.com. On Jan. 10, 2006 Adrian Douglas reported,
Today Jan 10 Goldman Sachs has gone more short on TOCOM. They have not changed
their long position it is still at 3611 as it was on Jan 5. The Short position
has increased to 20072. Their short position has increased about 6000 contracts
in 5 days.
This is a big losing position with the large rise in gold from $489 on Dec
21 when they first started loading up on these contracts.
From this, we can surmise that Goldman's gold "short
position" stood at about 14,000 contracts on Jan. 5, 2006 when the price
of gold stood at 526.00. Since that date, Goldman's "long position" has
ranged from the number above to 6,016 as of Feb. 23, 2006.
Goldman's "shorting" of gold on the Tokyo Commodities Exchange [TOCOM] - described
above - appears to be at odds with this Bloomberg
article that cites a Goldman Report dated Dec. 19, 2005 - where gold was
named a top trading pick:
You have to love this article that just hit the wire at Bloomberg.
Cartel Head Honcho Goldman Sachs is cited....
QUOTE Bullion is a "top trading pick' for 2006, Goldman Sachs Group
Inc., the third-biggest securities company, said in a Dec. 19 report, citing
concern over inflation, currency values and the U.S. trade deficit. END
Oh really! Goldman Sachs is bullish on gold? At the end of the article they
list the predictions of all the analysts for the gold price for 2006. Goldman
Sachs prediction is....wait for it....$515! That really is a bullish call,
a real top trading recommendation considering we closed at $530.3 on the
first trading day of the year.
Barclays comes in with a call of $465. What a bunch of clowns! They probably
have the right digits but not arranged in the right order! Even JP Morgan
has predicted $558 and that must have brought tears to their eyes to go to
press with that!
And here is what Goldman's open interest has done [as of key dates] since
- reconstructed data complements of www.Lemetropolecafe.com [Midas]
commentaries:
| Date |
Short |
Long |
POG |
| Jan. 10 |
20,072 |
-- |
541.00 |
| Jan. 18 |
31,677 |
4,415 |
545.00 |
| Jan. 25 |
37,390 |
4,606 |
561.00 |
| Feb. 1 |
39,226 |
-- |
569.00 |
| Feb. 8 |
53,054 |
-- |
550.00 |
| Feb. 14 |
45,993 |
-- |
540.00 |
| Feb. 16 |
41,516 |
6,016 |
540.00 |
| Feb. 20 |
44,192 |
-- |
554.00 |
| Feb. 21 |
41,337 |
-- |
553.00 |
| Feb. 22 |
41,232 |
6,016 |
552.00 |
| Feb. 24 |
45,162 |
5,688 |
558.40 |
| Feb. 28 |
47,492 |
-- |
561.50 |
| Mar. 2 |
45,563 |
-- |
568.30 |
| Mar. 6 |
45,955 |
-- |
555.20 |
| Mar. 10 |
41,646 |
4,553 |
539.90 |
The long data is incomplete - but is of little consequence because it changes
so little. What is noteworthy is that Goldman Sachs had Gold rated as a "buy" for
clients - all the while they were aggressively selling [piling on the shorts]
from late Dec. 05 onward to a peak at or around Feb. 8, 2006. Given the fact
that Goldman had publicly stated gold was a buy - why were they piling on the
shorts from mid Dec 05 to Feb 8?
The data above also would appear not to jive with this Globe article
[Feb 14, 2006] - since by that date, the data clearly demonstrates that Goldman
had become a buyer - covering shorts - after a 20 dollar price break:
Sell gold: Goldman
ROMA LUCIW
February 14, 2006
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is recommending that investors get out of gold
and lock in their gains just two months after it suggested they buy.
On Dec. 5, the brokerage issued a list of its top trades for 2006, one of
them being the purchase of gold futures for delivery in December 2006, priced
then at $534.50 (U.S.).December gold futures settled Tuesday at $568.30 on
the Comex division of New York Mercantile Exchange, which would have given
an investor who followed Goldman's advice a return of 6.3 per cent over two
months.
Goldman said it recommended locking in gains because of fears that the price
of bullion will slide.
"We have given back quite a bit of the profit since we entered the trade
in early December, but are worried about the potential for the price to slide
all the way down and have decided to exit," Goldman said.
Gold for April delivery - the most active contract -rose to $548.90 Tuesday.
The yellow metal touched a 25-year-high on Feb. 2, then suffered its biggest
drop in two years on Feb. 7. Monday's closing price of $542.10 for the current
contract was the lowest since Jan. 5.
"Technically, yesterday's break of earlier February lows suggest further
potential trouble as does the inability to hold the gains made after the
bounce from that large decline," Goldman said. "The move below $545 is potentially
troublesome."...
And Now For Dessert
The topper - like a triple fudge - crushed nuts, whipped cream with cherries
and sprinkles really needs one - is this:
Over the past couple of months, virtually all of Goldman's "shorts" have been
put on in the Dec. 06 and the Feb. 07 contracts. They are and have been consistently "long" their
relatively paltry 3 - 6 thousand contract position in the near months - as
in 3,838 contracts long in the nearby April 06 contracts. You can see it for
yourself here,
but you better hurry - you only have until April 1, 2006.
So, despite public utterances in the mainstream media on the part of Goldman
Sachs, their actions - as depicted by their positioning on TOCOM - are highly
consistent with price capping and at odds with views being espoused by their
analysts for widespread public consumption.
Oh well, as of April 1, 2006 - I guess that means there will just be one less
thing to worry about, eh?
|