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To: Quinn who wrote (8529)2/3/1998 5:49:00 PM
From: Harmattan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14627
 
here is Ted Butler's latest on silver in case anyone hasn't read it.
gold-eagle.com

THE 800 POUND
GORILLA

I really hadn't planned on writing another gold/silver lease scam piece
for awhile, but I happened to read Martin Armstrong's article of
1/28/98, and I got the feeling he was taking issue with my contention
that the silver lease con was over, or that it ever existed. If you
haven't read his piece (located at the bottom of this article), please
do so, because it is an extremely important statement on the current
predicament that the large industrial silver users and derivatives
shorts face. It very clearly telegraphs the exit strategy planned by the
big users/shorts. That planned strategy is the single biggest threat to
the workings of the free market in recent history.

Armstrong's agenda is clear - the only hope for the big users/shorts in
silver is for the government, any government, to come in and confiscate
all available physical silver and arbitrarily terminate all paper
contracts of silver. They are obviously disturbed by the prospect of
resolution by the forces of the free market. If you were in their shoes,
you would also be disturbed. For the sake of the markets, let's hope
they don't succeed in their exit plans.

In classic double-speak, Armstrong rants about the upward manipulation
in silver, while cleverly ignoring that at $6/oz, silver is cheap.
What's also ignored is that whatever amounts of silver the buyers may
own, either in physical or paper contract form, the sellers of that
silver were not coerced into those transactions. Now, it is clear that
the sellers are having second thoughts. Yes, there has been a
manipulation in silver, but it has not been of the upside variety. The
real manipulation has been the fifteen year downward rigging of silver
prices through the leasing scam and the 800 pound gorilla in the room
that everybody is doing their best to ignore and speak around. But the
gorilla is getting tired of sitting still and is starting to throw his
weight around. He will be ignored no more. You see, the gorilla is the
largest naked short position the world has ever seen, and its resolution
is going to be a monster. Funny, Armstrong didn't mention that.

You might want to get out a pencil and paper, or calculator, while I
attempt to validate what is a pretty strong statement, that silver has
the largest naked short position ever witnessed in the world's history.
Don't worry, this will be simple math, as I'm no rocket scientist. The
latest available data from the COMEX (Jan 29), indicates a total open
interest in futures and call options (the two classes of contracts that
can result in the ultimate liability of having to deliver physical
silver) of over 170,000 contracts. Convert that into ounces by
multiplying by 5,000 ounces (the contract unit of trade), and you'll
come up with 850 million ounces. That's the total amount held long and
held short on the COMEX. (Of course, there is an unlisted derivative and
lease market, which could bring the total real short position to 2 or 3
times the listed exposure, but since the Central Banks or the bullion
banks don't disclose their real books, let's stick with the published
statistics.) Against that 850 million ounces, now measure available
total inventories and world production. Even if you assume all visible
inventories (around 100-200 million ounces) and total world production
(around 500 million ounces) were somehow available to the COMEX shorts
(admittedly ridiculous as the inventories are owned by someone not
necessarily the shorts and world production can't even satisfy world
consumption, so by axiom isn't available to the shorts), there is no way
the shorts could get their hands on anywhere near enough material to
cover their potential obligations. Are you starting to get an idea of
the dimensions of the silver short position? We're not quite done yet,
because if this were the normal configuration of open (short) interest
to inventory and world production in all, or other, commodities, my
claim of biggest ever short position would be bogus.

So take out the newspaper again, and test me by going through the same
exercise with other commodities. Let's do two or three together, and
then I'll challenge you to prove me wrong by finding any commodity that
even comes close to the silver short to inventory/production ratio.
Let's start with corn. Total open interest in corn futures and call
options is 540,000 contracts, or 2.7 billion bushels. Forget inventories
and world production, US production alone runs 9 billion bushels. How
about oil? Total open interest for futures and call options runs a
whopping 715,000 contracts, but that translates into 715 million barrels
of oil, or only about 10-15 days of world production. Gold has a
combined futures and call option open interest of 435,000 contracts on
the COMEX, which translates into 43.5 million ounces or more than 50% of
world production, but that's a very small fraction compared to known
stocks. (I'm aware of the large off exchange and lease exposure in gold,
but remember we are only comparing known statistics). No, silver is in a
class by itself for having such a lopsided short position to real stuff
ratio, and has for the past fifteen years. And don't think that this
skewered ratio exists only in comparison to other commodities. While in
extreme cases an individual stock may sport a short position equal to 10
or 15% of shares outstanding, the total short position for all stocks
runs something like a half of 1% compared to all shares outstanding.

The point of all this is not just to demonstrate that when it comes to
the short position, silver is off the charts when compared to anything
else, but to stimulate your thinking as to what this means. What it
means to me is that we have the bizarre situation where the size of the
derivatives position of silver towers over the size of the real market.
In silver, not only does the tail wag the dog, the tail is larger than
the dog! How can that be? How can a derivative market be larger than the
host market from which it is derived? Now here comes the tricky part. If
the paper market in silver is much bigger than the physical market,
guess which market determines the price? As you answer that question,
remember that the paper market setting the price (not discovering, but
dictating) is against every principal of commodity law. Forget commodity
law, how about common sense? It is impossible to have a short position
larger than what exists or could be produced, yet that's the condition
in the silver market. And if someone sold short more of something than
existed, don't you think that would have a price-depressive influence?

To those who would say, so what - there are just as many longs as shorts
(I have gotten that response), please consider this; all it takes for a
long to complete his contract obligation (aside from selling out) is to
fill out a check. A short (who doesn't buy back) must round up and
deliver material that doesn't appear to be available. Besides, the longs
aren't the ones wailing.

Now do you have a sense of the real problem in silver? Now do you
understand the screams of alarm at $6 silver, and the lawsuits and the
cries for government intervention? After crushing this market for 15
years with massive paper shorts, the deficit balancing supplies from the
lease market have dried up, leaving only a literal paper tiger. The only
question is whether the government says to hell with the free market and
bails out the big users/shorts, and rewards them for manipulating the
silver market for 15 years with their massive and uneconomic short
positions by mandating an artificial settlement. For the sake of free
markets, let's pray they don't.

Ted Butler

1 February 1998