Saturday 4 Sept :-)
  11:15a EDT Saturday, September 4, 1999
  Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
  This commentary at www.lemetropolecafe.com by GATA  Chairman Bill Murphy is especially interesting for its  news about Princeton Economics International, the firm  of the economist Martin Armstrong, who shared his  commentary with us here a few months ago. I'll welcome  any response from him. 
  Meanwhile, please post this as seems helpful.
  CHRIS POWELL, Secretary Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
  * * *
  Thursday, September 2, 1999
  By Bill "Midas" Murphy www.lemetropolecafe.com
  What a day! Goldman Sachs sat on the gold market (what  else is new?), as gold rallied only $1.10 while the  dollar swooned again, bond yields rose, and the stock  market dived. Silver put in a better performance and  rallied 7 cents. 
  Behind the scenes there was all kinds of news. 
  The lease rates rose again today, with the one-month  rate soaring to more than 4 percent. The six-month rate  is about 3.6 percent; all of a sudden the lease rate  market is inverted. A bullion dealer acquaintance told  me that the physical gold market is on fire and there  is just not much gold around. One-week rates are even  higher than one-month rates. There was actually alarm  in his voice. All this comes after the August gold  contract was almost squeezed. That will give you some  idea of what the gold market manipulators are up  against. 
  This is only the beginning of their angst and it is  what I have been harping about for months now. The  shorts have been relying on less formidable  supply/demand deficits than is the case. Midas relies  on Frank Veneroso's supply/demand forecast. He tells me  that the deficit is now about 160-180 tonnes per month.  (I have known Frank for 20 years and he is always early  and almost always right.) That is a big number and may  be 100 tonnes more per month than the bears comprehend.  Thus they are being blindsided here if they are  listening to less-informed precious metals services. 
  And that is why I have said over and over that we have  the shorts and the "Hannibals" right where we want  them. 
  Desperate they are and back to their old tricks. All of  a sudden they are floating talk that the International  Monetary Fund is finalizing plans that outline a  proposal for central banks to buy some of the fund's  gold reserves, freeing about $2 billion to ease the  debts of the world's poorest countries. 
  Well, three cheers for Le Metropole Cafe's John  Brimelow. Here is what he had to say about this latest  IMF scheme: 
  "New York, Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- John Brimelow,  director of international equities research at Donald &  Co. in New York, comments on the International Monetary  Fund's plan to possibly sell gold to direct buyers  rather than in the open market. The IMF is considering  gold sales from its reserves to finance debt relief for  the world's poorest countries. 
  "'If the IMF takes an 'off-market' approach, that means  instead of going to the marketplace and offering the  gold to all and sundry, they will negotiate with a  specific buyer,' Brimelow said. 'Any large party could  negotiate directly -- a central bank, a hedge fund, or  another parastatal institution. Its rather like a block  trade in the securities business.' 
  "This approach 'can avoid pressuring the market,  although that's assuming the person who buys the stuff  hangs on to it,' Brimelow said. 'If they don't sell it  or they don't lend it, then it's a transaction that  won't damage the market.' 
  "The problem is that 'central banks don't report what  they are lending. There's no way of tracking it,'  Brimelow said. If the IMF sells gold to central banks  that lend it to the market, 'through the back door, the  IMF would be achieving the same effect as selling the  gold' directly to the market, he said. 
  "'It seems to be a thinly camouflaged version of the  original plan and I don't think it's going to fly,'  Brimelow said. The key obstacle would be getting  consent from the U.S. Congress, which has so far  blocked direct market sales. 'I think the IMF  bureaucracy is displaying extraordinary arrogance and  even stupidity in its dealings with Congress. At a very  deep level, it doesn't understand how the American  political system works.'" 
  John has it nailed. The IMF and their Hannibal Cannibal  cronies don't give a tinker's darn about the poor. For  36 out of the 41 poor gold producing countries have  already asked them not to sell this gold. Yet they  persist in the charade. Why? Because their buddies, the  bullion dealer, big-money crowd gold shorts, are  desperate to have gold supply hit the market, and all  they care about is keeping the gold price down. These  devious crumb-bums need the IMF gold supply to cover  their gold shorts. 
  Our team will do what we can to shut them out of their  nefarious plans. 
  All my contacts in the Joint Economic Committee and  Senate Banking Committee, etc., have left for the Labor  Day weekend. I will contact them next week and send  them Brimelow's comments along with a few of my own. 
  Bank Scandals. One after another. Why there aren't more  people looking into the biggest banking scandal of all  time -- the manipulation of the gold market and  orchestration of low prices? It blows my mind. 
  Credit Suisse has been shown the exit from Japan, the  Bank of New York is under siege for moving the money of  the Russian elite and Russian mobsters out of that  country, and today came word of two more big banking  scandals. 
  The first was First National Bank of Keystone in West  Virginia. They had been touted as one of the most  profitable banks in the country with a reported capital  ratio of 16.5 percent. That ratio had them one super  sound bank. But lo and behold, the Office of the  Comptroller of the Currency just shut them down. It  turns out that half of their $1.1 billion in assets was  phony. 
  One day a banking king, the next day a banking  disaster. What was the difference from one day to the  next? Simple: The truth came out. 
  That is what is going to happen in the gold market.  When the scam is exposed (along with the true size of  the gold loans, 10,000 tonnes or more) and the shorts  try to cover, the price of gold will go from $250 to  $500 practically overnight, and for the same reason.  The truth will come out. That is why it is time to  focus and to invest in the gold and silver markets. 
  The second big story of the day was about GATA critic   Martin Armstrong and his Princeton Economics  International. Martin has decried GATA. He is a mega- bear on gold in the short term, looking for sub-$200,  and on silver, putting his money where his mouth is, as  far as we can tell. Sources tell us that one of his  hedge funds is short 20 million ounces of gold. He is  the most vociferous silver bear in the world and  constantly expounds that the price of silver is headed  for $2.80. He says silver ranks among the world's worst  investments. 
  The funny thing here is that when the price of silver  shot up last year to $7.80 after the Warren Buffet  silver-buying news, Armstrong complained that the  silver market was being manipulated. Then he called for  an investigation by the Commodities Futures Trading  Commission. There was no basis for what he had to say  and the CFTC told him so. Not that the CFTC would have  a clue what is going on in the metals markets anyway.  How quick were they to pull the trigger on the big  Sumitomo copper scandal? 
  Months ago I said Cafe sources told me that Armstrong's  operations were under scrutiny. This is what the press  had to say today: 
  "New York, Sept. 2, Reuters -- New Jersey Firm lies at  heart of Republic probe. 
  "At the heart of a regulatory probe that ie expected to  stall a merger between Republic New York Corp. and  Britain's largest banking group, HSBC Holdings PLC, are  the U.S. bank's dealings with affiliates of a New  Jersey economics forecasting firm. 
  "Republic's brokerage unit came under regulatory  scrutiny for allegedly mispricing investments for one  of its clients, Princeton Global Managements and  Princeton affiliate Cresvale International, sources  close to the situation told Reuters on Thursday. The  company that owns these two entities is Princeton  Economics International, a forecasting and derivatives  trading firm based in Princeton, N.J. 
  "The bank, which is cooperating with Japanese as well  U.S. regulators, said it fired the management of its  futures trading operations and suspended the head of  its Philadelphia-based securities unit, James Sweeney. 
  "Princeton Global is an investment company owned by  Princeton Economics and helps Japanese institutions  hedge their foreign currency transactions. Princeton  Economics, which employs 300, also owns futures broker  Cresvale Investments, whose Tokyo office was  investigated by Japanese authorities in May." 
  Cafe members might like to know that Republic has been  the silver and gold floor broker for Armstrong. Plus  you might also like to know that that Armstrong's  prediction is that the yen will go to 278 to the  dollar. 
  Get the picture? Princeton is mega-short the yen, gold,  and silver. We know what is happening to the yen  shorts. Armstrong has berated us for our views of what  is going on in the gold market. What goes around comes  around. Boomerang time here, and only a matter of time  before this guy blows up and is carried out. 
  Bloomberg reports that "Martin Armstrong is considered  to be the biggest individual silver futures trader on  the Comex division of the New York Mercantile  Exchange." I will send the stretcher to the Comex for  him. 
  Seriously.... The question that needs be answered here  is: Why was Republic marking up the value of the hedge  fund? What is there to hide? Is Armstrong's group in  serious trouble? Certainly he has big problems. How  easy will it be for him to cover his massive gold and  silver shorts if he has to? Does he call Alan Greenspan  as everyone else does? 
  More soon. Get long. Be strong. 
  Midas  |