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Additional resources for earning interest in gold

14 responses to “A 14 Handle on Silver. Again. 8 Nov, 2015”

  1. How about charting the gold price against the “real” (that is nominal less some inflation rate) 30 day interest rate. At one point, PIMCO claimed there was a correlation.

      1. It may be true that “Interest is what it is”, but there still may be a correlation between the price of gold and the interest rate less the CPI. It would be instructive if you published the graphs, to (at least partially) confirm or deny this correlation.
        Thank you,
        Paul

          1. What can those of us that just can’t feel at all good about data accuracy when calculating real interest? If they did it right it would really show far more negative real rates. Which should have the monetary metals pricing FRNs lower, which boils us down to the choice between “manipulation”, or the sheople populace are so damn ignorant they can’t possibly fathom any merit in jumping off the debit Ponzi train, and instead prefer paying out the ass to be enslaved.

            What we need are some specialized shrinks to help the .00001% of us that can do the math cope with the frustration of having to ride out this monetary spectacle amongst such mass ignorance!

  2. Your explanation for the silver cobasis rising more than the dollar price in silver mg:

    “(though bear in mind that silver has much more of a cobasis distortion field than gold, as the near contract tends to tip into temporary backwardation before gold does, and deeper).”

    My observation:

    SIZ15 has dropped by 5.5 cents from 2c contango at its high to 3.5c backwardation
    SIH16 has dropped by 5.5 cents from 7c contango at its high to 1.5c backwardation

    Where is the cobasis distortion? The near contract has not yet tipped into temporary backwardation; instead market tightness is causing cobasis to rise disproportionately in both SIZ15 and SIH16.

    Is this deniable?

  3. PS on the GSR

    The GSR is tracking (upwards, as you often mention) but weakly and behind most of its support lines on the current 5 year uptrend. It has breached to the downside almost all of the many possible support lines for the GSR channel that could be drawn. If it drops to 71 (for example on a return of SIY00 to retest $16 with the normal 50% move in percentage terms in gold) then there are NO remaining support lines unbreached.

    Just as price drops in both levels have led to EXCESS rises in the silver cobasis, they have also led to INSUFFICIENT rises in the GSR. These factors imply that the next price rises will cause GSR to breach more conclusively, which will feed further GSR bearish pressure from the physical market.

    You emphasise that your system is fundamental rather than chart-led, but fundamental factors in the marketplace (i.e. portfolio reallocations from gold to silver by physical hoarders) are trend driven and these factors actually lead physical conditions since trend observations cause physical trades which then affect the things that you measure.

    I submit that if GSR even revisits 71, and certainly 70, its uptrend is dead and physical market commentators like yourself should be making this abundantly clear, LONG before it tracks down to its longer term equilibrium points around 50 or even 60.

    1. I agree with your general GSR comments. But any kind of mea-culpa is exceedingly unlikely from someone (anyone really) who views the world in this way. Gold was recommended at $1,700 all the way down to its current $1,100. Go back to the earlier backwardation articles — even 2011 — and see for yourself. This is a fundamental argument that has little to do with forecasting prices. At least forecasting them accurately.

      That said, IMO long term holders are still likely make nominal dollars on the trade. You just have to ask yourself whether this approach to the market makes sense from a short term or trading perspective. I can only say that for me it does not.

      Besides, does it make intuitive sense that some sort of ‘perfect’ fundamental price can be determined by an incremental deviation in basis? I would argue, as I have in the past, that (at best) the proof in the pudding…. and after another $100 drop in the price of gold (but none of it clears!! haha) this pudding is “fundamentally” uneatable.

      That’s isn’t to say anything negative about Keith… not at all. He’s a great Austrian and a great guy overall. While I find his extrapolation of the basis/co-basis relationships questionable, his general version of monetary truth is much closer to realty than Paul Krugman’s.

  4. While I always read in your reports that it is speculators who are buying or selling who are causing the sharp drops in price in both silver and gold, I see no mention of the odd times at which this occurs, and of the huge mounts which are traded. I also see no abrupt increases in price that come anywhere close to the declines. Do you believe in the manipulation that occurs on the futures market as recorded by GATA, or is that something that you discount, and if so, why? Thank you.

  5. Thanks for your comments.

    Ratio: I did something I don’t recall ever doing before. I updated the post with a new graph. It shows March and May 2016 silver.

    As to the GSR, the ongoing theme of this Report is that speculators cannot sustain a price move. If they buy silver and sell gold when they see technical indicators, then you are right that the GSR will go down. And then where will it go? Eventually if that trend is exhausted, if everyone is in, then where next for GSR? If silver supply and demand don’t change, then the GSR has to bounce back.

    Btw, the GSR need not be fueled by falling silver prices. It could be (and we expect it to be) fueled by rising gold prices.

    Mike7.62: I have written a lot of material debunking the conspiracy theories. I encourage you to scroll back, there are 6 or 7 articles going back to early 2013. Also see the first video posted, my interview on Capital Account.

  6. Like most reading this, I’ve bought a few coins in my day, sure. Almost always the coin dealer’s price is based on the Kitco “ask”… and I don’t disagree; it’s only a couple bucks more than the active futures month. So in that sense even I, too, am buying (my bid) over the futures ask.

    Remind me, why is this such a big deal again? And one that suggests the entire financial system is about to blow?

    1. It is not a big deal when retail products distributed in small quantity to consumers have a premium over 400-ounce bars in London. That is akin to buying food at retail, where an ear of corn sells at a much higher price than corn on the Chicago Board of Trade.

      It’s a big deal when 400oz bars sell for a large and rising premium to contracts for future delivery.

  7. hi Keith, find articles heavy and interesting. From my understanding of your articles I see the technical and fundamental pictures not playing out as they perhaps should, so this is a new angle of seeing crowd behaviour.

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