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198 of 198 7:05 PM
Mon 13 Sep
Subject: GATA critic accused of securities fraud From: gatacom-
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10p EDT Monday, September 13, 1999
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
You probably first learned from GATA Chairman Bill Murphy's "Midas" commentary about the brewing troubles of Martin Armstrong's Princeton Economics International Inc. Tonight's Midas reports Armstrong's arrest on federal securities fraud charges.
While Armstrong disparaged GATA a few months ago, we take no pleasure in his troubles. But what those troubles signify for the markets and for gold in particular may be of great importance.
If this comes to you as an attached file and, like me, you don't like downloading attached files, you can find this dispatch on the Internet at:
egroups.com
Please post this as seems useful.
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
* * *
From www.lemetropolecafe.com
"Midas" commentary by Bill Murphy
September 13, 1999 Spot gold $256.30 a big unchanged Spot silver $5.15 down 4 cents
"Two-man army wins!" "Two-man army wins!"
All said in the spirit of the famous Chicago Cubs broadcaster, Harey Carey (God rest his soul). The Cubs have not had many victories over the years. Neither have gold bulls. But this may be a big one as the gold loan" picture unfolds in the months ahead.
* * *
Technicals
Stopped dead in its tracks. With oil crossing $24 per barrel with ease, the gold market managed to crawl back to unchanged after being down most of the day. The CRB was up nicely again too and finished at 203.35. Bonds refuse to go down as yields spent most of the day around 6.06 percent, while the yen exploded against the dollar once again, rising to three-year highs.
Yet gold, which should be the beneficiary of all of this positive news, just sits there doing nothing like Dicky the Dunce. La La Land thinking continues to rule the day. It is perverse. The one-month gold lease rate, which has now been higher longer than anyone can remember, shot up above 4 percent again today, up some 60 basis points. Yet gold sits there.
Day after day it becomes more apparent the gold market is being controlled. That is the bad news. The good news is that the big shorts know they are in big trouble. At some point one of them will bolt from the cartel and the big move up in the gold price will be under way.
Silver continues to meander and build a larger base.
* * *
Fundamentals
From our point of view, the big fundamental story of the day is this:
"Princeton Economics Director Charged in Multi-Billion Fraud
"New York, Sept 13 (Bloomberg) -- An officer of Princeton Economics International Inc., a money- management firm, has been arrested and charged with cheating Japanese investors in a multi-billion Ponzi scheme that was allegedly aided by a top executive of Republic New York Securities Corp., prosecutors said.
"Princeton Economics director Martin Armstrong cheated Japanese clients of the firm, which sold more than $3 billion of notes, U.S. prosecutors charged. Of that money, about $1 billion is still owed to investors of Princeton Economics, according to a criminal complaint filed in federal court in New York.
"The president of Republic New York Securities' futures division at the time of the alleged wrongdoing provided Armstrong with false confirmation letters purporting to show that the clients' investments were worth far more than they actually were, prosecutors alleged. The charges didn't name the Republic executive.
"Princeton, New Jersey-based Princeton Economics and its units maintained Princeton Economics investors' accounts at Republic New York Securities, the charges said.
"Republic Securities and its parent company, Republic New York Corp., weren't charged, according to the U.S. attorney's office in New York.
"Armstrong, Princeton Economics, and another company Armstrong controlled -- Princeton Global Management Ltd. -- were also sued for fraud by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
"Princeton covered up $500 million in trading losses in accounts held for some 300 Japanese investors, prosecutors said. In fact, the officials charge, accounts were commingled using funds in one to pay off interest due in another. In addition, Armstrong ran up trading losses of more than $504 million. The U.S. attorney's office and the SEC estimate that Armstrong owes investors a total of $1 billion against a remaining balance of $46 million in his funds.
"Armstrong faces up to 10 years in jail and a fine of $1 million or twice the gain or loss resulting from the crime."
This is the same Martin Armstrong that a few months ago had this to say to the secretary of the Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee, Chris Powell:
"I understand your frustration that gold has been perhaps the worst investment for the past 20 years. But to argue that it is being manipulated due to large short positions is not justified. There is no interest in gold at this time, and the central banks are all sellers. After they sell their gold, then we will see a bull market. Once those supplies are gone, no one will be able to lean on that supply and your bull market will begin.
"I hate to tell you, but gold will drop to under $200 before it turns. I find it extremely one-sided how a Buffett and company of tagalongs is not a manipulation because they buy, while selling is a manipulation. The very guys you argue are manipulating gold down were big sellers of gold and buyers of silver during the Buffett rally. Goldman Sachs or not, the economy simply does not support your position. And I do not want to hear how I am short or some nonsense to try to discredit my views, because it is not true. PEI owns a 51 percent stake in a public gold mine in Australia. That is my long-term view; it does not change my short-term view."
In June Armstrong also wrote this public commentary involving GATA:
"A two-man army calling itself GATA has begun to besiege the media attempting to gain a lot of press on the platform that gold is being 'manipulated' by a cartel of investment banks. They constantly point to what they call the huge 'carry trade' in gold, where there is far more gold sold than exists."
* * *
I am not sure where to begin here. First, I hate to see anybody go down, but this man has no concept of reality and has mocked us in public. This is what GATA has been fighting -- so many like him. How many other accepted mainstream gold shorts are feeding the public the same drivel? So let us get to what this might mean.
First, even bullion dealers who dispute that Armstrong is short hundreds of tonnes of gold say they believe that believe that he is heavily short silver. One called tonight and wanted to know what the price of silver was doing.
Second, we have heard now from two very good sources that Armstrong is short 24 million ounces of gold. That is right -- 746 tonnes of gold. How is that going to be covered if Armstrong is wiped out? The Bloomberg news story says $1 billion is owed to Princeton Economics investors. Where is the money? Did it all go down the drain in a short crude oil/short yen/long bond position?
Will the Fed pull another Long-Term Capital Management maneuver to bail out another loser? The LTCM bailout happened in part because the investors involved were part of the establishment. Armstrong is an outsider and now that law enforcement is involved, a bailout does not seem likely. So if we are correct about his huge borrowed gold short position, how does that get covered? What will Republic Bank do about the matter?
We will stay on top of the situation for you.
What this may do is to shed some light on what we at www.lemetropolecafe.com have been telling you month after month. The gold loans are much, much bigger than any of the mainstream crowd understands or is letting on. We now think they are 10,000-13,000 tonnes. We think the specs have borrowed more gold than most analysts can imagine. We believe that just four hedge funds are short 50 million ounces of gold, or almost 1,500 tonnes. What about all the spec gold borrowers combined?
All that physical borrowed gold supply that has hit the market is what has kept the gold price so low. The Hannibal Cannibals have been trying to keep that fact from the gold community and press. The Cafe and GATA have been trying to bring the truth out -- and few will listen. The next few months could be incredibly exciting as the gold market scam becomes evident.
I leave for Vancouver tomorrow morning and will be back Wednesday night. I'm sure that I will have much to say by Thursday.
Today platinum was up $7.30 and finished at a rocking $373.50. Palladium was up $5.60 and finished at $368.25. Word around town was that Armstrong was doing some short covering. Just the word.
The media continue to elaborate on central bank selling. But which banks are these besides the Bank of England? In times past central banks would conduct a selling program and then announce it when they finished. The months and years are going by with word of massive central bank selling, but where are the announcements?
So it's nice to see some public commentary about some potential central bank BUYING. Dow Jones reported the following from India last week:
"The Reserve Bank of India should utilize the current trough in gold prices to buy gold and increase reserves, Indian banking and gold market experts told Dow Jones newswires.
"At a time when leading central banks around the world are questioning the need to hold gold as a reserve asset -- indeed, some have gone ahead and sold -- the market experts say that, if nothing else, India's central bank should take a more active interest in managing its gold assets.
"'Reserve Bank mustn't jump on the bandwagon and sell,' said S.S. Tarapore, former deputy governor of Reserve Bank.
"'The time to sell is when you anticipate a fall in gold price, not after the gold price has fallen steeply and the next cycle of gold rise is going to come,' Tarapore said.
"Tarapore said he wants the central bank to buy gold. Reserve's Bank's stock of about 357 tonnes, valued at $2.65 billion, is small and can be 'safely doubled.'"
How come the Indians make so much sense, while the British tried so hard to give away their cents?
Cafe member Steve H. writes as follows on a revolting development:
"Reuters is reporting that British Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown will chair the IMF policy-making Interim Committee. If Brown is influencing policy at IMF, that explains the convoluted and strange machinations surrounding the new gold policy at the international institution. It should also put gold advocates around the globe at the ready. Brown is a well-known advocate of gold sales."
* * *
Potpourri and the Gold Shares
How high will the price of oil go? According to Russian experts it is almost certain that the Russian natural gas pipeline that supplies both Eastern and Western Europe will be interrupted.
The Lawrence "of America" Kudlows of the world say how all is so well in financial land. After all, he always says, "Just look at the gold market." Our camp says things are not what they seem -- and contrary to what Kudlow has to say, our evidence of that is also the low price of gold. If all were well, the powers-that-be would have no fear of it rising to a proper equilibrium price.
Cafe member J.R. sent me a most revealing letter about the state of financial affairs in middle America. You can draw your own conclusions of what is what out there.
"I wrote to you the other day with a question about Warren Buffett and his silver position. I thank you very much for your quick response concerning the matter.
"My occupation is dentistry, which means I need to apologize in advance for my writing skills and my lack of knowledge about financial affairs.
"But I would like to pass on to you some interesting observations about our local economy.
"First, I live in a county that until recently had the highest per-capita income in Indiana. The county has 70,000 people and we are heavy into the automotive industry, both foreign and domestic companies. You would think that we have a reasonably sound economy. But the following is what I have been able to ascertain from local business owners with whom I am acquainted, and from my own practice.
"Several years ago we had $250-300 of credit card use per month in our office. Now it is 10 times that amount. As of a year ago we were writing off about 6 percent of our receivables and sending them to collection. We are now at 12-14 percent. My bookkeeper informs me that the average writeoffs for the businesses she deals with also have an average of 12 percent. These figures are double what they were a year ago. I am hearing this from the physicians and the lawyers too.
"Just two days ago I spoke with my independent insurance agent and he is singing the blues too. This morning I was at the auto body repair shop and and the owner was telling me that in the last 30 days he has had a huge increase in the number of people wanting him to inflate the estimate to encompass the deductible.
"These people don't have any money!
"Now the last thing, which I can't hardly believe, are those people financing their groceries at 18 percent with their credit cards. I realize that some are paying off the balance but I suspect that the majority are not.
"We are a debt-ridden society and peple are almost, if not already, at their limit.
"With private, corporate, and government debt so high, I see no way out except for a crash. I hope this gives you a perspective on small-town America, although there is probably nothing in here you didn't already know or suspect."
* * *
We are very wary of the New York Fed and have told you so. Here is the latest on its recent announcement. U.S. Rep. Ron Paul does not miss a trick.
"Wednesday's announcement by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York that it will expand the collateral accepted in repurchase transactions to include pass-through mortgage securities of GNMA, FHLMC, and FNMA, STRIP securities of the U.S. Treasury and 'stripped' securities of other government agencies raises troubling questions," U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) said.
"'I have contacted the office of Rep. Spencer Bachus, the chairman of the Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy of the House Committee on Banking and Financial Services, to call for hearings on this important question,' said Rep. Paul, vice chairman of the subcommittee. 'Hopefully, hearings would put to rest serious questions raised by this announcement.'
"Paul said the decision -- which the Federal Reserve said was made because of 'century date change' concerns -- sets a risky precedent, especially in light of Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Stuart Eizenstat's earlier suggestion to monetize not only government sponsored enterprises' debt but corporate debt as well.
"Paul added, 'I commend Rep. Richard Baker's call for greater oversight of the GSEs and to eliminate their line of credit to the Treasury.' Baker is the chairman of the Subcommittee on Capitol Markets, Securities, and Government-Sponsored Enterprises of the House Banking Committee.
"This decision, though approved only through April 2000, bolsters the value of the implied government guarantee. This action is highly risky when viewed from the perspective of potential taxpayer liability. These highly-leveraged institutions are already leveraged off the Treasury balance sheet. A further expansion of collateral with mortgage securities, which the Fed can use as collateral for monetary expansion, must be closely scrutinized."
Stay tuned. Let the good times roll.
Midas
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