Posted on 05/06/2010 6:02:51 PM PDT by blam
Gold Shortage Rumors Abound
By Addison Wiggin
05/06/10 Baltimore, Maryland When you hear of wars and rumors of wars, dont be alarmed! reads the Gospel according to Mark. These things must happen, but they dont mean that the end has come.
We seldom cite the Bible, but the passage came to mind this morning as we reflected on an e-mail chain among several of our business partners and acquaintances. Only instead of wars, the word that came to mind was fraud.
Fraud and rumors of fraud abound in the gold market.
Ive heard these rumors for a while, says Byron King. From No gold in Fort Knox to Lots of gold bars from Hong Kong are really gold-coated tungsten to the London Metals Exchange is empty. They never pan out.
But like someone phoning a terror threat to the FBI or someone pulling a fire alarm in a school you cant totally blow it off.
The rumor sparking Kings comments goes like this: The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) the UKs version of the Comex has almost no bullion in its vaults. That is, theres nothing backing the exchange contracts. And once its holdings are audited, the exchange will collapse.
I have seen these stories, says our friend James Turk of GoldMoney.com, and do not have any inside knowledge about their accuracy. I do believe, however, that many bullion banks and bullion trading houses operate on a fractional reserve basis, meaning that they do not have enough physical metal on hand to meet all of their obligations to deliver physical metal.
That is the way banks have always operated and is one major reason why they periodically get into trouble. Historically, bank runs are, in effect, demands for gold.
Unfortunately, banks and bullion houses do not report their gold liabilities or gold assets. So there is no way of knowing whether they are solvent, i.e., have enough physical metal to meet their liabilities to deliver metal. Basically, if you own paper gold from a bank of bullion house, instead of real, physical metal in hand or in secure storage like we do in GoldMoney, you are dependent upon the banks creditworthiness. I dont recommend being in that position.
I have no proof the rumor is true, adds Egon von Greyerz of Matterhorn Asset Management in Switzerland. But a lot of people who have studied it closely are convinced that there is a major shortage in physical gold at LBMA. LBMA trades around 700 tons net of gold daily. That is 25% of world annual production and around $6 trillion annually. To back that amount of trading on a 100% reserve ratio basis, it would need several years production of physical gold, which they definitively havent got.
So as I have argued many times, LBMA, Comex, and the banking system as a whole has only [a] fraction of the gold required to settle outstanding contracts when investors demand physical delivery. In addition, central banks have leased their gold to the LBMA member banks for years in order to suppress the gold price.
Of the 30,000 tons that central banks are supposed to hold, I would be surprised if they have even half of that.
Fine, you say, but what does all this mean?
I have been expecting for some time, Egon continues, that during 2010, more and more investors will demand physical delivery. With gold production working at full capacity, combined with the massive outstanding paper gold position, increased demand for physical gold can only be satisfied at much higher prices, which we are likely to see in the next few months.
Byron agrees, but adds a cautionary note: Gold is rising because governments everywhere are incompetent. If a major vault is empty, thats good for other gold holders. But Id be careful about making policy on it.
A major dislocation in which physical delivery is demanded, but cannot be fulfilled by an exchange would spike the gold price big-time in a matter of hours. But dont bet the farm on it. Buy gold because its an insurance policy against financial calamity. Like the next item
This morning, Gold sits at record highs measured in euros, pounds and Swiss francs. And at $1,185, its less than $40 off the record measured in dollars set last December. Because of this calamity:
Riot police fire walking in Athens yesterday
As we write, a new round of protests is under way in Greece. Yesterday, demonstrators set fire to a bank, killing three people. Parliament is debating wildly unpopular austerity measures that are a condition of the EU/IMF bailout.
bump
“Gold is rising because governments everywhere are incompetent. If a major vault is empty, thats good for other gold holders.”
They are not incompetent. These governments are filled with criminals.
ping.
I got into gold about 8 months ago, I’m very happy with my results so far.
Yeah. And there’s a “shortage” of diamonds too. /heavy sarcasm.
Dripping even.
The London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) may be trading paper that would be hard to cover if delivery was demanded. What about the ETFs GLD and IAU, do they have physical gold to support the shares issued and bought?
Exactly, and that is why I bought some stock in gold mine. They will have to mine the gold to cover the paper.
When speaking of “record” gold prices at $1200 per ounce, it’s always important to calculate inflation.
Gold hit about $800 per ounce around 1982 as I recall.
That would equal $2400 per ounce in 2010 dollars.
Mail me to get on or off the Free Republic Goldbug Ping List.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.