Just so ya don't lose interest :-)
12:25a EDT Wednesday, December 15, 1999
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
We owe another debt of gratitude to our good friend Arthur Hailey, the novelist and longtime advocate of gold's traditional monetary function, who remarks favorably about GATA in a big feature story about him in the current issue of BusinessAge magazine. The story follows. Please post it as seems useful.
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
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THE GOLD CRUSADER
BusinessAge Magazine London, November/December 1999
Arthur Hailey has written some of the most successful blockbusters of the century and has earned a fortune from his efforts. Much of it he put into gold stocks, but the author is now furious about the way leading gold producers appear to be fixing the market. David Guyatt reports.
By David Guyatt
Internationally renowned author Arthur Hailey has waded into battle on behalf of honest mining-sector shareholders who oppose an international cartel composed of Wall Street's finest blue-chip companies and a group of leading gold mining operations said to be manipulating the price of gold.
Hailey, who is now almost 80 years old and has made millions from his bestsellers "Airport" and "Hotel" among a host of others, has now written to major gold mining company Barrick Gold to tell them he is "disgusted" with the way the company had "excessively" hedged their future production. He believes that the company's hedging strategy was designed to create downward pressure on the price of gold which would otherwise "rise to natural and honest levels."
Hailey's letter to Barrick states that he is an "enthusiastic supporter of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee" (GATA) and that until "a few days ago" he was a "long-time shareholder of Barrick Gold," along with his wife. He adds ominously: "But no more."
"I have sold our Barrick shares and am actively urging others to do the same," Hailey states. "You simply cannot trust these people to put shareholder interest first," he adds. So angered is the acclaimed novelist at on-going price manipulation of the gold market that he has now invested in other mining companies that specifically do not hedge their future production. He urges others to do likewise.
The author is in good company when it comes to charges that the gold market is being manipulated. Robert Champion de Crespigny, chairman of Australia's largest mining company, Normandy Mining, when asked about the recent plunge in gold prices, told reporters: "I think you'll find this is banks manipulating the price because of the financial trouble two gold companies are in." De Crespigny is believed to be referring to Ashanti Gold and Cambior. Both are said to have been virtually destroyed following the unexpected and massive rise in the price of gold in late September. Their trouble stems, it is believed, from structured hedging programmes that failed to take into account a large surge in the gold price. It was a hedge that didn't work.
Meanwhile, Hailey's action follows a call to arms by GATA, an independent watchdog group, which has led the fight against price manipulation in the gold market over the past year. Long ignored, GATA's claim of market manipulation came to the fore earlier this year when the price of gold plummeted $30 per ounce.
This followed a surprise announcement last May by the Treasury that Britain was to sell over half the nation's gold reserves held by the Bank of England. The move was widely interpreted as being designed to dampen the price at a time when it was close to breaching a significant upward resistance level. A hue and cry followed in Parliament and elsewhere due to the huge losses -- almost $400 million was wiped off the value of the reserves prior to their auction. British gold sales had hitherto been conducted in the greatest secrecy and later announced as a fait accompli.
The move by the Treasury is said to have caused deep anger amongst numerous European central bankers due to the damage that the unexpected price drop did to the Euro -- itself partly backed by gold. In late September 1999, this anger turned to action when 14 European central banks dramatically announced an agreement to restrict gold sales and gold lending for the next five years. The price leapt almost $50 per ounce on the news.
The issue of cheap gold centres on gold leasing. This is a technique where some central banks have lent their gold to Wall Street and other international investment banks for as little as 1 percent per annum. Central bankers argue this provides them with an income stream from an asset (gold) that otherwise does not perform in terms of interest growth.
Others argue, however, that this explanation avoids the core issue that has more to do with the banking fraternity networking for profit at tax-payers expense, than anything else. Having been granted a cheap gold loan, the investment bank can sell the physical metal on the spot market in exchange for cash. This can run to hundreds of millions -- if not billions -- of dollars. The next step in the procedure is to invest the cash in, for example, US Treasury securities. These have paid above 6 percent annual yield during 1999. The difference of 5 percent is clear profit for the investment banks.
With short positions estimated at well above 10,000 metric tonnes throughout the banking sector, the derived profits are simply enormous and could run into billions of dollars. The only downside for those banks and firms that have been involved in this action is if the gold price moves against them. Since a gold loan is structured at an agreed "strike price" for the physical metal of, say, $300 an ounce, any downward move in the price will generate additional "mark to market" profits for the "short" bank.
Meanwhile, a price rise above the strike price will cause losses. More importantly, with mining production at only 2,500 metric tonnes a year, those banks with short position are finding it virtually impossible to obtain physical gold to repay their outstanding loans. This, obviously, creates a severe haemorrhaging of balance sheets. Ordinarily, this would create even stronger demand for physical metal and, consequently, force the price even higher.
That is not happening. On the contrary, from a high of $330 per ounce at the beginning of October, the price has now dropped back to under $300 an ounce. This, clearly, defies the rules of supply and demand but complies with heavy selling of options in the derivatives markets. The latter market is the key mechanism of structured hedging that many larger gold mining companies have so heavily relied upon.
Yet matters do not end there. According to market sources, the recent European five-year restriction on gold sales originated with Germany, France, and Italy. According to these same sources, Chancellor Gordon Brown was excluded from these discussions in punishment for Britain's gold auctions that the Europeans viewed as favouring the US dollar. This had the effect, sources say, of galvanising the Bank of England into scurrying around in the background in a panicky attempt to participate in the European decision if only to avoid losing influence in European monetary affairs -- providing the announced gold sales could proceed on schedule.
By mid-October the European move was countered by the unexpected announcement that Kuwait had authorised the Bank of England to lease the 79 metric tonnes of Kuwaiti gold reserves. This was a significant counter- punch to the European strategy and has eroded the gold price still further. Round two in this clash of monetary Titans can be marked up to the Anglo-American contingent, it seems.
It was into this fearsome fray that novelist Arthur Hailey strode. His letter to Barrick Gold was timed to coincide with the Denver Gold Conference, an annual event attended by the glitterati of the gold world. Hailey has promised to bring his influence to bear on his "wide circle of friends and contacts" to copy his move and support a "free gold price."
Speaking from Nassau in the Bahamas, Hailey told BusinessAge of his long involvement with gold, dating back to his 1975 best-seller, "The Moneychangers," which is due to be re-released in the UK next summer. The author also hit out at the "gold collusion crowd," which he sees as a "conspiracy among the very rich to make themselves even richer at the expense of ordinary, modest investors." This he added resulted from "dishonest manoeuvering in the gold market," which he believes, "along with GATA, will be forced to an end soon." This he thinks will cause "an inevitable rise in the gold price."
Although the author still has a small holding of gold coins, his investments are now principally concentrated in mining companies that do not hedge their production. His own experiences with the gold market are not good, however. An earlier holding of gold bullion held in Zurich was sold when the price of gold plummeted, causing a "bad loss."
"I resent the manipulation of the gold market," he says, echoing a growing sentiment among many shareholders and others who believe the time has come for the authorities must take action to corral the excesses of the movers and shakers. "There is so much dishonesty."
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