I am not sure but I believe: there is even a comment on Diamonds. I do recall today that they were saying DeBeers is having the biggest sale of the year cuzz there is such a worldwide shortage:-)
9p EST Tuesday, February 22, 2000
Dear Friend of GATA and Gold:
Here's GATA Chairman Bill Murphy's "Midas" commentary tonight at www.LeMetropoleCafe.com
CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.
* * *
MIDAS COMMENTARY FOR FEBRUARY 22, 2000
By BILL MURPHY
Spot Gold $304.90, up 40 cents Spot Silver $5.25, unchanged
Technicals
The beat goes on. Gold traded higher all day yesterday and again today during the Asian trading hours, as well as during the early European trading session. Then, right on cue, the New York bullion banks came in and sold the market down about an hour before the Comex open. Just following the same orders from the same general who has been leading the bear troops the past month, I guess. This general gets an "A" for consistency and an "F" for originality.
Gold traded $2 lower all day in New York and then rallied going into the close. This was an especially good sign as the higher Comex close brought gold all the way back and up against a downtrend line (the top of a now-bullish flag formation). I say "now" because today's close makes it more likely that we could come in tomorrow or very soon with gold gapping sharply to the upside and running. The bears gave it all they had today and yet gold closed up.
Why there should be a gap up or a big move up soon: The bears are running out of ammo. They have already used the Ashanti settlement story twice (see below). That the bear camp has had to tout this settlement twice within a week is a sign of how desperate they are to come up with a bearish case these days.
Even the retreating Euro has turned against them, as it rocketed today, closing above par at 100.63. Then there is March palladium, which breached $800, closing at $806.80, up a mere $115.55 per ounce.
Or take oil. The March contract went off the board today at $29.95, up 45 cents and right off its contract high. That was after press stories were circulated all day of how the price of oil is going to go down because the Saudis and their crew are going to turn on the spigot in March.
The case for an explosive gold market is off the charts. Only a surprise central bank sale, stunning the market out of nowhere and at the frantic urging of U.S. officialdom, can prevent the price of gold from trying to catch up to palladium.
Silver continues to build its base. We have a KABOOM coming here too. One day it will be off to the races with silver too.
Fundamentals
The Dutch sold 7 more tonnes of their gold last week. That leaves them with only 5.5 tonnes to sell until September 26, 2000. They had all year to dump their gold, but have been eager to get rid of it quickly. I wonder: What was the rush?
The bears will be getting no help from future Belgian gold sales either:
"Feb. 18 -- Belgian Central Bank Governor Guy Quaden Wednesday confirmed that the Belgian National Bank has no immediate plans to sell more gold. 'We have sold quite a lot in the last 10 years because of our big gold reserve, but there are no plans today to sell gold again,' Quaden said."
>From Bloomberg today: "Gold fell 1 percent, after Ashanti Goldfields Co. reached an agreement with its creditors that probably will delay purchases of metal to pay off bad trades."
As I said earlier, that is the second time in a week the press has taken the Ashanti settlement story from the bullion dealer analysts as a reason for the gold price to go lower. That story went out this morning with gold down $2 to $3. Now that gold closed higher for the day, what should it read?
How about this one from Midas: "Gold closes higher after short clients of bullion dealers tire of hearing same bearish stories over and over."
How come I can always find a way to pick on the Hannibal Cannibal crowd? Last week Chase Bank was a big seller. Naturally they trotted out their gold analyst to give the press his bearish 2 cents' worth.
>From Reuters: "New York, Feb. 17 -- "My personal view is we're going to test the $285 level within the next couple of weeks," said Donald Eckert, global bullion risk manager at Chase Manhattan. "From what we've seen, all the good news is out."
One might note that even the gold bears are raising their downside targets. For months now Midas has said it makes no sense to be short a market that has so much upside and so little downside. Being short may not make any cents for the bears either.
Midas would like you to know that our camp does not relegate all bullion dealers to the "Hannibal Cannibal" camp. Many Cafe members, including myself, have good relations with many bullion dealers. I know several and like them very much. Our gripe is with a select group that have caused so much aggravation for so many of us who thought we were investing in a free market based on supply/demand fundamentals.
Bullion dealer Barclays Bank released Tony Hill, its main forward trader in London, last Friday. The disarray grows in the bullion dealer ranks.
Midas also would like to differentiate between the dealers. The bullion dealers who have sold traditional products to the producers should be just fine. But the ones who have sold the long-term structured products (the exotics) are the ones showing stress. No reason to get into it all now, but the fancy hedge programs sold by certain aggressive bullion dealers failed to take into account sky high-option volatilities and liquidity in longer-dated forwards.
I do not know where Tony Hill stood, but I find it ironic that he was let go just as Barclays gave Ashanti a $100 million loan. I can't figure this one out. Barclays has faith in Ashanti for $100 million but no faith in its own trader who was advising Ashanti?
An excerpt from Ashanti's statement today:
"Ashanti Signs Agreements That Secure Its Future
"NEW YORK, Feb. 22, 2000 (Business Wire) -- Ashanti Goldfields Co. Ltd. is pleased to announce that today the final signatures have been obtained on agreements which it believes will secure its future....
"Commenting on the signings, Sam Jonah, chief executive officer, said, ``The signing of the new facility will allow Ashanti to pursue its objective of getting its exciting Geita Project into production in the shortest time possible, to the benefit of all stakeholders.
"Furthermore, the agreement reached with the hedge counterparties will enable the company to go forward and retain the benefits of hedge protection without the spectre of potential cash calls for a three year period.
"The negotiation of this facility has been extraordinarily complex, requiring agreement from each of Ashanti's 22 lending banks and 14 hedge counterparties. I would like to thank all parties for their hard work in completing the new facility. In particular, I would like to thank Mark Keatley, our chief financial officer, who, with his team and our advisers, has devoted himself tirelessly to achieving this successful outcome."
What am I missing here about this Ashanti/bullion bank lovefest? Gold is trading just above $300. Ashanti has some $470-$570 million worth of margin calls somewhere around these price levels. What if the price of gold goes to $400, $500, or $600? How large will the margin calls be then?
It took the bullion bank syndicate almost five months to resolve this situation and gold is quiet. Regard palladium. Historically, the price of gold has followed the price of palladium. What if it does so again? This Ashanti agreement is a recipe for DISASTER down the road.
Apparently Australian gold mining magnate Joseph Gutnick did not get the inside scoop from Chase's Eckert. On Friday, at the annual meeting of his Centaur Mining & Exploration, he said the outlook for a long- term sustained gold price rally was the most promising since the mid-1980s.
>From Reuters: "'I think the outlook for gold is the most positive it has ever been in my 15-year career, even though the prices are still depressed,' he said."
Potpourri and the Gold Shares
The XAU flipped today, also climbing back from an early set back to close at 68.28, up a modest .24.
Cafe colleagues were told that the Plunge Protection Team would be in there buying the Dow today. Sure enough, they tried all day with the Dow Jones stocks and it finally worked at the end of the day.
We were also told by top-notch sources that Energy Secretary Bill Richardson is going around the world strongly suggesting that the oil producers peddle their oil with greater vigor. I cannot get into details, but "the big stick" is being used.
The oil price shock (the United States has no inflation, of course) is taking its toll in Canada, where the truckers are striking.
The New York Fed's McDonough takes taxis in New York, so he is not very aware of how oil prices (which show no sign of abatement) are having a greater price effect than we are being told. Today McDonough announced to the press that "inflation is low and going lower."
Speaking of oil just one more time: On CNBC today, one of the network's daily commentators noted how each of the back months on the Mercantile Exchange was priced successively lower by about $1. Look, he said, oil is expected to be only $24 per barrel in a few months.
I do not know too much about anything, but I can tell you this, that is crazy. The most powerful bull markets are "realizing markets." The front months lead the way because of a shortage in the "real world." As the bull move continues, the back months catch up to the real world as unbelievers are forced to become believers by paying up. That is not true in all commodity market moves, but it is true in the great bull ones. I have been there in soybean, cattle, hog, and copper moves.
The economic/stock stories make little sense these days. The stock market is going down on inflation fears, while the bond price is soaring and yields drop sharply from 6.78 to 6.08 percent. Yes, we all know there is going to be a supply disruption with the 30- year Treasuries, but if the Fed is going to raise rates in the months to come because of inflation concerns, who wants these bonds at such low yields? The yield curve is very inverted with shorter-term instruments yielding much higher rates than the Treasuries. That has to create some stress for bankers in general.
I could go on and on about this. The bottom line to me is that something does not smell right. My guess is that there are financial problems building behind the scenes and they will erupt just when the average investor least expects them to.
When that scenario unfolds, it is likely to unleash a gold-buying panic.
Madness investing rules the day. The investing legends can't cut it these days because they refuse to abandon the investment principles that made them so much money over the years. Those principles made them investment gurus too. But today the name of the game is "momentum" for the "ask no questions" investor.
Warren Buffet and Julian Robertson of Tiger Management come to mind. Remember last summer when the Cafe told you how much trouble Tiger was having; that Tiger was losing clients left and right via redemptions and its investment performance was very poor? Our report reached CNBC, which took the internet crowd to task for spreading such nonsense about Tiger. Tiger had about $16 billion under management then. Today CNBC reported how poorly Tiger Management has done and that Tiger's money under management is down to $6.5 billion.
The Cafe nailed that one right on the head, just as John Brimelow's information from his Russian sources that palladium was going to $800 was RIGHT ON!
There was a London Bullion Market Association meeting in Dubai this weekend. Never have I read such drivel and platitudes about the gold market than has come out from there via the wire services. And it was not the dealers who uttered the pablum to the press. After such devastation for so long, this industry needs FIRE IN THE BELLY, not inane declarations.
While the World Gold Council reported record gold demand last week, demand for diamonds is so strong that DeBeers, which controls 70 percent of the world market, may hold its biggest ever gem sale this week. The economic recovery and buying from the United States, the world's biggest gem market, has fueled the demand. What is good for diamond demand is good for gold demand.
Although U.S. Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman advised GATA Treasurer/Secretary Chris Powell that GATA should receive by today answers from the U.S. Treasury Department to its questions posed in our advertisement in Roll Call in December, that was not to be. We are hoping to have answers for you tomorrow.
-END-
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