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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: carranza2 who wrote (160881)8/4/2020 10:04:54 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217822
 
Yes and no.

The HK-based positions allow for no options, and am putting on an option trade campaign in USA zone :0)

Gold, according to Armstrong, shall run up through September. Gold according to my timing service may take respite and go down as much as 20%. I do not want to be left off of the gold rocket, but need to pack parachute and retro-rockets.

Just shuffling for more gold.

Quarantine is nice in some ways, for folks who like to hang out in man-cave, and am guilty. Cape Town man-cave was nice, in large 5,000 sft structure, and close to the kitchen but not part of kitchen, water and valley view.

Vancouver cave is my bedroom, part of 1,000 sft apartment, water-view in between buildings and over rooftops. I fidget as the Jack fidgets. Self-quarantine ends 10th August. We are socially conscientious.

Here is a good war story ...

bloomberg.com

London Traders Hit $500 Million Jackpot When Oil Went Negative

Regulators look into a small group of investors who got rich on the unprecedented drop.

More stories by Liam Vaughan
August 3, 2020, 9:01 PM PDT


Oil storage in Cushing, Okla.
Photographer: Johannes Eiele/AFP/ Getty Images

On April 20 the price of a barrel of oil for delivery the following month plummeted $40 in an hour, settling at –$37. It was the first time crude had ever crossed into negative territory. Regulators, oil executives, and investors have struggled to understand how a commodity at the heart of almost every aspect of global trade had fallen so far that buyers had to pay counterparties to take it off their hands.

But for a small group of veteran traders at a tiny London firm called Vega Capital London Ltd., the mystery mattered less than the results: They pocketed as much as $500 million that day, according to people familiar with the matter, who spoke to Bloomberg Businessweek on condition of anonymity.

Vega’s jackpot, which hasn’t been previously reported, involved about a dozen traders aggressively selling oil in unison before the May West Texas Intermediate contract settled at 2:30 p.m. in New York, the people say. It’s a tactic Vega’s traders used regularly, according to another person familiar with the firm’s strategy, but that day its trading coincided with a period of unprecedented volatility, when demand for fuel was wiped out by the coronavirus pandemic, and storage space in Cushing, Okla., where buyers take physical delivery of WTI crude, had all but disappeared.

Crude OilPrice per barrel of West Texas Intermediate

Data: Compiled by Bloomberg

Now regulators at the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority, and CME Group Inc., owner of the Nymex exchange where the trading took place, are examining whether Vega’s actions may have breached rules on trading around settlement periods and contributed to oil’s precipitous fall, according to people with knowledge of the probes.

Within 24 hours of the crash, the May WTI contract had bounced back to about $10 a barrel. But the plunge, however brief, created some big losers. They include thousands of Chinese and American retail investors who, lured by oil’s recent slump, had piled into instruments whose value was pegged to the contract’s April 20 settlement price.

Whether Vega’s windfall was a result of savvy trading, blind luck, or something else, the idea that a relative minnow could have such a profound impact calls into question CME Chief Executive Officer Terry Duffy’s April 22 declaration that the futures market had “worked to perfection.”

“The idea that the anomalies that day were a function solely of supply and demand is fanciful at best,” says Joe Cisewski, special counsel to Better Markets, a lobbying group that advocates for tougher regulation. “Oil producers, brokers, and other market participants have been sent into serious financial distress. Regulators need to objectively and thoroughly investigate what happened.”

Spokespeople for the CFTC, FCA, and CME declined to comment. The CFTC has said it’s looking to release a report on the crash later this year. Vega didn’t return emails seeking comment.

Prop-trading firms like Vega give independent traders access to the world’s exchanges, back-office services, and extra capital to trade with in exchange for a desk fee, a commission on every trade, and sometimes a share of any profits. In a trillion-dollar energy ecosystem dominated by the likes of BP, Glencore, and Royal Dutch Shell, prop firms are bit players.

Vega was started in 2016 by Adrian Spires and Tommy Gaunt, friends who’d worked together on the management team at another London prop firm, Tower Trading Group, before branching out on their own. In 2017 about 20 of Tower’s energy traders quit to join Vega, sparking a legal dispute that was settled out of court. Gaunt quit as a director last year, and Spires, 44, now owns all of the business. He left school at 18 to take a job in the trading pits of the London International Financial Futures and Options Exchange. Some of Vega’s traders spent time at the International Petroleum Exchange, buying and selling barrels of oil using hand signals, before commodities trading migrated from open outcry onto screens.

The firm has an office a short walk from Liverpool Street station, above one of London’s All Bar One pubs, which it shares with a group of mostly recent college graduates trading cryptocurrencies for another company also owned by Spires. But most of Vega’s traders work from home, according to people familiar with the firm, even more so since the U.K.’s lockdown came into force.

While more than two dozen individuals trade through Vega’s omnibus account, finding information about them is difficult. Only a few list Vega as their employer on LinkedIn. The company’s website has remained under construction since Vega was founded.

One oil investor describes the firm as something of a throwback to the days of the pits, when rowdy so-called locals made or lost fortunes before heading to the pub to celebrate their winnings or drown their sorrows. Many of Vega’s traders know each other socially, playing golf and taking ski trips. They also trade together during key periods to maximize their impact on the market, the people familiar with the firm say.

To understand how Vega wound up making so much money that day, it’s helpful to consider some of the idiosyncrasies of the oil market. Among the most popular ways to trade oil is Nymex’s WTI futures contract, which allows buyers and sellers to agree on a price for 1,000 barrels of light sweet crude for delivery at a future date. New contracts are released every month, and they settle at 2:30 p.m. on or near the 20th of the month.

Nymex also offers a corollary instrument called Trading at Settlement, or TAS, in which buyers and sellers agree to transact at whatever the settlement price turns out to be. The settlement price is based on a volume-weighted average of trades occurring in the two minutes before 2:30 p.m. While it might seem curious that anyone would agree to buy something without knowing the price, the TAS market is popular among exchange-traded funds and other funds whose mandate is to track the price of oil rather than to get the best deal. It was also central to Vega’s strategy.

One of the quirks of the oil futures market is that to take a long-term position, investors must keep buying new monthly contracts, then sell them before they expire and buy future months’ contracts, a process known as rolling. A significant proportion of the market’s participants are speculators with no interest in taking possession of any oil, so before each contract expires they have to close out any residual positions, creating a flurry of buying and selling.

In the lead-up to the April 20 settlement, rumors were circulating that there would be significant downward pressure on the May contract. The recent slump in prices had attracted bargain-hunting retail investors into funds that track oil, including the Bank of China Ltd.’s Treasure, a vehicle linked to the price of oil. To manage its position after the influx, Bank of China and the banks it uses to help execute trades needed to sell large numbers of the May contracts and buy June ones. Two weeks before the settlement, CME, which monitors market activity, issued a rare public warning that negative prices were a possibility.

On April 20, as Bank of China and others were selling May contracts, Vega’s traders were hoovering them up in the TAS market, according to people familiar with the matter, agreeing to buy oil at whatever the settlement price turned out to be. Then, as the settlement time approached, they aggressively sold outright WTI contracts and other related instruments, contributing to the downward pressure on the price. Vega stood to profit if it managed to buy oil through the TAS market more cheaply than the oil it sold through the day.

Vega’s selling collided with an exodus of buyers, and the May contract tumbled from about $10 at noon to zero at 2 p.m., then all the way down to settle at –$37. Oil’s dive into negative territory meant that Vega ended up being paid for many of the contracts it sold as the market was falling—and for all those it bought at the –$37 settlement price via TAS, locking in a huge profit.

Buying TAS and selling outrights before and during the settlement is a well-known strategy that dates back to the pits, according to market participants, but it carries considerable risk. Selling futures can quickly turn into losses if a bigger player shows up and starts buying. “It’s a big poker game,” says Greg Newman, founder of energy-trading firm Onyx Capital Group.

There are also rules that forbid trading with the goal of deliberately affecting the settlement. In 2008, Dutch firm Optiver was sanctioned by the CFTC for abusing the TAS mechanism and boasting about its exploits in emails. And in 2011 the agency introduced a rule prohibiting a practice known as “banging the close,” which it defines as trading heavily during the settlement period in one market to influence a larger position elsewhere.

But proving manipulation requires the government to demonstrate intent, which is difficult without incriminating communications such as text messages. And winning cases has been difficult, even with the new rules. “They’re not in any way slam-dunks,” says Aitan Goelman, a former head of the CFTC’s enforcement division and now a partner at Zuckerman Spaeder.

It seems unlikely that Vega’s traders could have predicted just how far oil would fall on April 20. Its selling that day met a whirlwind of other factors that spooked potential buyers and exaggerated all participants’ impact on the market. As a result, Vega’s traders made more money than they could have dreamed of—and found themselves in the authorities’ spotlight. That may explain why its traders, usually active on settlement days, weren’t active in May, June, and July, according to a person familiar with the firm’s trading. —With Jack Farchy

Read next: When Tesla Hits the S&P 500, It’ll Spark the Wildest Passive Trade Ever

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To: carranza2 who wrote (160881)8/4/2020 7:09:46 PM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217822
 
Re <<out of character>>

You would be correct, but here be what I managed to do Message 32866518 long gold, sort of, sold micro gold mines, and strapped on retro rocket / parachute on theory that silver shall prove more volatile than gold especially if and when to the downside, and

Before the tippy top of the day, before I napped, went long GLD itself again, and so am now good for rocket ride to 2,300 - (?unlikely but who can know) 3,000, holding tight to DRD schema (August / November / February, short Put / Call, strikes 12.50, 15, 17.50)

The edging up to November should be thrilling (the year is going by sooooooo quickly).

Believe we might be living globalized Fiat Money Inflation in France, only more, much much more. We are fortunate. What a computer game.

Am wondering where Are the the RobinHooders ?



ft.com

Gold price hits $2,000 for first time on Covid-19 and inflation fearsPrice of precious metal has raced higher this year, breaking nominal records

August 4, 2020
The price of gold has risen 32% this year, making it one of the world’s best-performing mainstream assets © BloombergGold hit $2,000 an ounce on Tuesday, a milestone that caps a record-breaking rally driven by depressed bond yields and fears over the impact of Covid-19 on the global economy.

The 32 per cent rally this year has made gold one of the world’s best-performing mainstream assets, reflecting concerns among investors over the sustained number of coronavirus cases, particularly in the US, and the impact of trillions of dollars of stimulus from governments and central banks around the world.

“The root cause [behind the rally] is uncertainty,” said George Cheveley, a fund manager at Ninety One. “It’s uncertainty about whether the world plunges into recession next year or recovers, spurred on stimulus money.”

“When you think of both of those outcomes, gold has a place,” he said.

The surge in the price of the metal, often used as a haven in times of stress, stems in part from investor demand for gold-backed exchange traded funds, holdings of which have risen to record levels.

Investors stashed a net $7.4bn of cash into gold-backed ETFs last month, according to data from the World Gold Council — adding to the record $40bn they invested in the first half of the year.

Gold would benefit as bond yields continued to slide and inflation started to materialise, said Jim Luke, a fund manager at Schroders. US 10-year real yields, which take into account inflation, fell to an all-time low of minus 1.02 per cent this month. “We’re in a world where inflation will move above targets and real rates will be significantly lower than now,” Mr Luke said.


Typically, gold suffers a disadvantage relative to government bonds — another classic haven for nervous investors — because it does not offer dividends or interest payments. But aggressive easing from central banks, including vast bond-buying programmes from the US Federal Reserve, means that the returns available to new buyers of bonds are slim. The benchmark 10-year US government bond now yields close to 0.5 per cent.

Many government bonds carry negative yields, meaning buyers are guaranteed a loss if they hold the debt to maturity. That boosts the relative allure of gold.

Governments globally have announced $20tn worth of stimulus to combat the impact of coronavirus, according to Bank of America, a little over 20 per cent of global gross domestic product.

The bank said the impact of coronavirus and US-China tensions could push the gold price towards $3,000 a troy ounce in the next 18 months.

Gold is still under-owned by global investors relative to global stocks, according to the bank, with less than 3 per cent of their assets in the precious metal. In 1980, allocations were as high as 6.2 per cent, the bank’s analysts said.

“We still see ample scope for traders to consider increasing their gold holdings,” they added.

The gold price is still not an all-time high after taking into account inflation. Fahad Kamal, chief market strategist at Kleinwort Hambros, said that “when you factor in inflation, the all-time high of gold is about $2,500?.?.?.?when Soviet tanks rolled into Afghanistan in 1979”.

Mr Luke at Schroders said the gold rally could have further to run as investors grappled with negative real rates and high stock market valuations.

“People who look at gold tend to get characterised as ‘gold bugs’ and some do have that kind of blind-faith mentality,” he said. “But what’s drawing investors to gold now is not faith in gold itself, it’s much more a lack of faith in other things — central banks, governments and, in particular, a lack of faith in the availability of real returns elsewhere. Gold is the inverse of that.”

Gold last traded up 2.1 per cent on the day at $2,018 a troy ounce.

Video: Gold is king but should you buy it? | Charts That Count

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